Around the Boree Log

1925 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Around the Boree Log is a 1925 Australian silent film by Phil K. Walsh adapted from the poems of "John O'Brien" (Patrick Joseph Hartigan). It tells stories of a priest's life around the 1870s in the Goulburn area.[3][4]

Directed byPhil K. Walsh
Written byPhil K. Walsh
Based onpoems of Patrick Joseph Hartigan
StarringMolly O'Donohue[1]
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Around the Boree Log
Directed byPhil K. Walsh
Written byPhil K. Walsh
Based onpoems of Patrick Joseph Hartigan
StarringMolly O'Donohue[1]
CinematographyLacey Percival
Production
company
Phil K. Walsh Productions
Release date
  • 25 September 1925 (1925-09-25)
[2]
Running time
7,100 feet
CountryAustralia
LanguagesSilent film
English intertitles
Close

Unlike many Australian silent films, a copy of it survives today.

Plot

A priest reads from the book of poems by John O'Brien and recalls his earlier life in the country. He remembers travelling hawkers, his first school, a bishop inspection, childhood romance, and the marriage of a girl to another man.

Cast

  • Molly O'Donohue (or O'Donohoe)[5] as Laughing Mary

Production

The movie was shot on location in the New South Wales bush, mostly at the Wollondilly River area near Goulburn, in early 1925.[6] The director had previously worked as an assistant on While the Billy Boils (1921) and would direct The Birth of White Australia (1928).[3] He also tried to make a film of the novel Love Blind but was unable to raise finance.[7]

Most of the cast were anonymous people who lived in the area.[8] Unlike The Birth of White Australia, which was funded by the residents of Young, this film received no financial assistance from Goulburn.[9]

Release

The film met with resistance from distributors who felt it was Roman Catholic propaganda.[10] It was also criticised for having little plot and consisting mostly of a travelogue of scenery and incidents in the country.[8]

Other reviewers however gave it unqualified praise;[11] it screened throughout Australia and New Zealand, made money for its backers, and created renewed interest for Hartigan's book.[12]

Box office success appears to have been strong.[13]

References

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