Dan Morgan | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alfred Rolfe [1] |
Produced by | Cosens Spencer |
Starring | Alfred Rolfe "and company" [2] Stanley Walpole |
Cinematography | Ernest Higgons [3] |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 3,500 feet [5] or 2,700 feet [6] |
Country | Australia |
Languages | Silent English intertitles |
Dan Morgan is a 1911 Australian film from Cosens Spencer about the bushranger Daniel Morgan. [7] It was said to be starring "Alfred Rolfe and company". [2] Rolfe directed three movies for Spencer, all starring himself and his wife Lily Dampier so there is a chance he may have directed this one and that it starred his wife. A prospectus for the Australian Photo Play Company said he directed it. [1] It is considered a lost film. [8]
The film consists of a series of episodes from the life and criminal career of bushranger Dan Morgan, leading up to his violent death at the hands of the police.
It started with Morgan's dismissal on a station, after which he steals his former employer's horses and begins his criminal career. He murders several people, including policemen and mailmen. [9]
In the words of The Sydney Morning Herald, "it is a candid tale of a cruel, evil life. Dan Morgan is not made into a hero, but something quite the opposite. His robberies and cold blooded murders inspire horror and leave no room for regret when he dies riddled with bullets." [10]
According to the Bathurst National Advocate, Morgan "shot people with as much compunction as a small boy would shoot flies. Consequently, it was with great relief that those present witnessed him get his just deserts—shot by police as he was in the act of crossing a stream by means of a fallen tree." [11]
The chapter headings were:
Spencer had previously made several popular films about bushrangers, The Life and Adventures of John Vane, the Notorious Australian Bushranger , Captain Midnight, the Bush King and Captain Starlight . [13] Unlike those, it appears Dan Morgan was written originally for the screen and not adapted from a play or novel.
Dan Morgan had appeared as a character in films based on plays such as Moonlite and The Squatter's Daughter.
Production took place at a time when there were rising fears about the negative influence of bushranger films on the general public. In April 1911 two teenage boys were sentenced to death for killing a woman and her daughter - in court one of them said they said been reading about Dan Morgan a week before the crime. [14] [15] [16]
Advertising tried to counterbalance this, claiming:
In the past some films descriptive of bushranging may have been inclined to create a false impression in the minds of young Australia. Mr Spencer has produced at great expense the true story of Dan Morgan, the notorious Australian outlaw, making no attempt to glorify his doings or palliate the heinousness of his crime, but presenting the subject in such a way as will point a strong moral lesson, and show the ultimate fate of all evil-doers, for the wages of sin is death. [4]
A 1946 article claimed the film was deliberately made to be anti-bushranger. [17] The Sydney Morning Herald said "The story is told in such a way as to point a good moral for the edification of the }m series." [18]
Theatre actor Stanley Walpole made his movie debut in the cast. [19]
The film was premiered at Spencer's Lyceum Theatre in Sydney on 17 May 1911 and ran until June. [20] It then played other cinemas and country areas, although does not appear to have received the wide release enjoyed by Spencer's earlier bushranger movies. As was standard practice at the time, the film was usually screened with an actor commenting on the action. [21]
Critical reaction was positive [22] with the reviewer from The Sydney Morning Herald calling it:
A thrilling series relating to the life of the notorious outlaw Dan Morgan, which was well received by a large audience. The picture-play shows realistically the exploits of that criminal, amidst surroundings of some beautiful Australian bush scenery, while the photographic quality is quite equal to anything yet accomplished from Mr Spencer's factory. [23]
The Sunday Times said "in the technical sense the pictures are admirable, and the reproductions of bush scenery are wonderfully well done." [24]
The Sydney Sportsman wrote that "the story abounds in thrilling episodes... with beautiful typical Australian scenery throughout. The quality generally is up to the high standard of all Mr. Spencer's productions." [25] The same paper later approved of the depiction of the police saying they were finally "receiving something in the nature of fair play. As in true life, they triumph over the bushrangers without being placed in the ignoble and ridiculous position of incapacity in which modern dramatists have been so prone to depict them." [26]
The Daily Telegraph said "beyond the flimsy justification of a severe horsewhipping following upon a stinging insult to his employer, and a certain amount of brute courage exhibited by a ruffian when in extremis, there isn't in the picture a single feature to attract sympathy for the ruthless robber and murderer." [27]
The Co-operator claimed "None of our readers should miss seeing Dan Morgan." [28]
The critic from the Sydney Referee said the movie had:
Realism without so much as a suggestion of romance. To phrase the matter bluntly, the new film reproduces some of the sensational incidents in the infamous career of a fierce outlaw, who stained his hands with blood. The glorification of Australian bushrangers in moving pictures having been condemned on all sides, Mr Spencer claims that no harm can be done if, as in this instance, the true character of the outlaw is presented. Still, it is a point for argument whether the doings of bushrangers are proper subjects for exhibition when there is a danger of the young receiving bad impressions at a picture show. No good purpose is served by illustrating the criminal side of life in Australia. Mr Spencer's artist has apparently taken the raw official records of the heartless Dan Morgan and constructed a picture story in all its natural horrors. One is shown a series of sensational encounters, in which Morgan murders his colleagues in cold blood, shoots wholesale his pursuers from behind safe shelter, and robs indiscriminately throughout his brief career, with never more than a natural suggestion of wavering courage on the part of other people. The last stand of the bushranger, when he is shot by a dozen bullets, closes the story. In the technical sense, the Dan Morgan pictures are admirable. [29]
The Sydney Sun said:
Mr Spencer has never turned out a better sample of motion photography than the Dan Morgan series... Enacted in same beautiful hush scenery the most striking episodes of Dan Morgan's career are portrayed with exceptional skill and realism. From the time when he was dismissed from his situation for laziness till he was riddled with bullets at the end of a gruesome man-hunt the sensational incidents of Morgan's life were depleted with a measure of fidelity to the period that betokened a great amount of thought and ingenuity. When Morgan shoots his comrade to facilitate his own escape; when he murders his former employer and fires his house; when he needlessly aims at an old man whom he has robbed of his horse; . and when, after shooting the troopers dead, he fiendishly kicks their bodies, the spectator, far from gaining any romantic ideas of those times, sees a terribly vivid picture of the hideousness of them. The episodes are splendidly acted and very cleverly stage managed. [30]
It appears the movie was a success at the box office. [31] The Sydney Sportsman quipped the film "has properly -'bailed up' Sydney people, judging by the crowded state nightly of the Lyceum." [32]
However, films about bushrangers were banned in New South Wales soon after and Cosens Spencer made no more movies in that genre. [33]
Thunderbolt is a 1910 Australian feature film based on the life of the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt. It was the directorial debut of John Gavin who later claimed it was the first "four-reel movie" made in Australia. It has also been called the first film made in New South Wales.
John F. Gavin was a pioneer Australian film actor and director, one of the early filmmakers of the 1910s. He is best known for making films about bushrangers such as Captain Thunderbolt, Captain Moonlite, Ben Hall and Frank Gardiner. Known informally as 'Jack', Gavin worked in collaboration with his wife Agnes, who scripted many of his films.
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Alfred Rolfe, real name Alfred Roker, was an Australian stage and film director and actor, best known for being the son-in-law of the celebrated actor-manager Alfred Dampier, with whom he appeared frequently on stage, and for his prolific output as a director during Australia's silent era, including Captain Midnight, the Bush King (1911), Captain Starlight, or Gentleman of the Road (1911) and The Hero of the Dardanelles (1915). Only one of his films as director survives today.
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Spencer Cosens better known as Cosens Spencer or Charles Cozens Spencer, was a British-born Canadian film exhibitor and producer, a significant figure in the early years of the Australian film industry. His company Spencer's Pictures was an early backer of Raymond Longford before it was absorbed into the conglomerate which became known as "The Combine".
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