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The Man from Kangaroo

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Directed by
  
Wilfred Lucas

Starring
  
Snowy Baker

Cinematography
  
Robert Doerrer

6.4/10
IMDb

Written by
  
Bess Meredyth

Screenplay
  
Bess Meredyth

The Man from Kangaroo httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Produced by
  
E. J. Carroll Snowy Baker

Production company
  
Carroll-Baker Australian Productions

Release date
  
24 January 1920 (Sydney)

Initial release
  
24 January 1920 (Australia)

Directors
  
Snowy Baker, E. J. Carroll, Wilfred Lucas, Ernesto Maurice Corpus

Producers
  
Snowy Baker, E. J. Carroll

Cast
  
Snowy Baker, Wilfred Lucas, Agnes Vernon, Charles Villiers, Malcolm MacKellar

Similar
  
The Shadow of Lightning, The Sentimental Bloke, The Romance of Tarzan, A Love Sublime, A Woman of Affairs

The man from kangaroo valley getaway episode 2002


The Man from Kangaroo is a 1920 Australian silent film starring renowned Australian sportsman Snowy Baker. It was the first of several films he made with the husband and wife team of director Wilfred Lucas and writer Bess Meredyth, both of whom had been imported from Hollywood by E. J. Carroll.

Contents

Synopsis

John Harland is a former boxer turned reverend posted to the town of Kangaroo. He falls in love with Muriel, an orphaned heiress, and discovers that her guardian Martin Giles is embezzling her inheritance. Harland earns the ire of parishioners by teaching young boys to box, and Giles manipulates local opinion to have the bishop remove him.

Harland rescues a gentleman from a mugging in Sydney who suggests that he go to Kalmaroo where a criminal gang has driven the church out of the area. Harland preaches, and unexpectedly sees Muriel in the congregation; her property is near Kalmaroo.

But her overseer is Red Jack Braggan who leads the gang which violently breaks up Harland's mission – much to the distress of Muriel who regards Harland as too timid – and is in cahoots with Giles. Harland goes to work as a station hand at a property neighbouring Muriel's.

Giles arranges for Red Jack to kidnap Muriel so that he might marry the girl and thus prevent her giving evidence against him. Harland rescues Muriel: they leap from the stage coach as it thunders across Hampden Bridge into the Kangaroo River.

Cast

  • Snowy Baker as John Harland
  • Charles Villiers as Martin Giles
  • Agnes Vernon as Muriel Hammond
  • Walter Vincent as Ezra Peters
  • Wilfred Lucas as Black Jack Braggan
  • Malcolm MacKellar (foreman)
  • Production

    Baker visited Hollywood in 1918 to shoot additional scenes for The Lure of the Bush and to study production methods. With E. J. Carroll he arranged to bring back a team of Americans to assist them making movies in Australia, including director Wilfred Lucas, his wife, screenwriter Bess Meredyth, actor Brownie Vernon, assistant director John Wells and cinematographer John Doerrer.

    Meredyth spent a few months in the Mitchell Library in Sydney looking for topics to make movies about. It was later stated at the Royal Commission on the Moving Picture Industry in Australia that Meredyth felt "the only truly national subject about which producers could make a picture [in Australia] was horse racing. Australians, she said, had not yet developed any distinctive individuality of national character or tradition." This is what prompted the Carrolls to make all their films with Lucas and Baker about bush and station life.

    The film was shot on location in Kangaroo Valley and Gunnedah, with interiors at the Theatre Royal in Sydney during September and October 1919.

    Carroll-Baker Productions was formed in 1919 with a capital of ₤25,000 between E. J. Carroll, his brother Dan, Snowy Baker and the Southern Cross Feature Film Company. Said Dan Carroll at the time:

    It Is not our intention to make any one subject which will not be of such a standard that it cannot be market ed in every English-speaking country in the world. With this ambition in view we are proud enough to think that we are being of national service to our own beloved Australia.

    They bought a house, "Palmerston" in the Sydney suburb at Waverley and converted it into a studio. They ultimately made only two more films, The Shadow of Lightning Ridge (1920) and The Jackeroo of Coolabong (1920).

    Reception

    The film was a success at the box office.

    References

    The Man from Kangaroo Wikipedia