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The Luck of Roaring Camp (1911 film)

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Directed by
  
W. J. Lincoln

Distributed by
  
Tait's Pictures

Director
  
W. J. Lincoln

Written by
  
W. J. Lincoln

4/10
IMDb

Production company
  
Amalgamated Pictures

Initial release
  
1911

Production company
  
Amalgamated Pictures

Cinematography
  
Orrie Perry

Produced by
  
William Gibson Millard Johnson John Tait Nevin Tait

Based on
  
stage adaptation by Mark Blow and Ida Molesworth of the novel The Luck of Roaring Camp by Francis Bret Harte

Starring
  
Ethel Buckley Robert Inman George Marlow's Dramatic Company

People also search for
  
Called Back, The Lost Chord

The Luck of Roaring Camp is a 1911 Australian feature-length film directed by W. J. Lincoln now considered a lost film.

Contents

The luck of roaring camp by bret harte


Plot

On the California goldfields, Will Gordin is falsely accused of murder and is about to be lynched when his girlfriend rides to the rescue. Scenes included:

  • Tom Barnes at Bay.
  • Fun in a Roaring Camp Saloon.
  • The Murder of Old Pard.
  • A Duel to the Death.
  • The Throw of the Dice.
  • Cast

  • Ethel Buckley
  • Robert Inman
  • John Cosgrove
  • Production

    It was based on a stage adaptation of the story by Francis Bret Harte which had proved popular with Australian audiences as performed by George Marlow's Dramatic Company since 1910.

    The partnership of Millard Johnson and Willard Gibson decided to make a film version.

    The George Marlow company provided the cast for the film, with the lead played by Marlow's wife Ethel Buckley. A cast of over a hundred was reportedly used.

    Reception

    The movie premiered at the Glacarium Theatre in Melbourne then the Palace in Sydney. It followed the release of Lincoln's earlier film The Mystery of the Hansom Cab.

    Reviews were generally strong. The critic from the Sydney Morning Herald called it:

    A thrilling story without words that is complete in itself without the words and that makes the drama more realistic than ever it could be on a stage without the aid of the pictures. The play has been carefully selected for this method of portrayal because it teems with exciting episodes and thrilling incidents in the life of the hard-living westerners. One part in particular that could never be seen on a stage without the camera is the splendid exhibition of horsemanship shown by a team of rough riders who were specifically employed for the purpose... almost every foot of it [the film] is bristling with exciting incidents.

    References

    The Luck of Roaring Camp (1911 film) Wikipedia