Trooper Campbell
Trooper Campbell | |
---|---|
Directed by | Raymond Longford |
Written by | Raymond Longford |
Based on | poem by Henry Lawson |
Starring | Lottie Lyell |
Cinematography | Higgins brothers |
Edited by | Higgins brothers |
Production company | Higgins-Longford Company[1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | one reel (12 minutes) |
Country | Australia |
Languages | Silent film English intertitles |
Trooper Campbell is a 1914 film from director Raymond Longford based on a poem by Henry Lawson.[2][3]
The movie is one of Longford's more obscure works. There is some reference to it being made but none of it being released in cinemas.[4]
The movie consisted of visual images to accompany an in-person recital of the poem.[5]
It was considered a lost film[6] but was discovered in the 1980s. Film writers Graham Shirley and Brian Adams stated that the film:
Shows an advance on The Romantic Story of Margaret Catchpole, not so much in performance, which is still haunted by melodrama, as in the use of depth of field and positioning within the frame... [It] appears to have been hurriedly made (it was never listed among Longford's major achievements) and displays nowhere near the polish of Alfred Rolfe's The Hero of the Dardanelles, completed halfway through the next year.[7]
References
- ^ "Raymond Longford", Cinema Papers, January 1974 p. 51
- ^ "Poverty Point", The bulletin. (Vol. 49 No. 2547 (5 Dec 1928)), nla.obj-601877135, retrieved 6 January 2024 – via Trove
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has extra text (help) - ^ "Story of g Lost Industry Australia Once Made Films", The bulletin. (Vol. 79 No. 4096 (13 Aug 1958)), nla.obj-702805906, retrieved 6 January 2024 – via Trove
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has extra text (help) - ^ Trooper Campbell at AustLit
- ^ Trooper Campbell (1914) (extensively revised and rewritten from a lecture delivered originally at the Australian Centre for theMoving Image on February 3, 2003.)William D. Rout
- ^ Eric Reade, History and heartburn: the saga of Australian film, 1896–1978, Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1979 p. 13
- ^ Graham Shirley and Brian Adams, Australian Cinema: The First Eighty Years, Currency Press 1989 pp. 35–36