The Man They Could Not Hang (1934 film)
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- Lorrie Webb
- Eric Bedford
| The Man They Could Not Hang | |
|---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Raymond Longford |
| Written by |
|
| Based on | dramatisation by Rigby C. Tearle of the autobiography of John Lee |
| Produced by | Rigby C. Tearle (J.A. Lipman) |
| Starring | Ronald Roberts |
| Cinematography | George Malcolm George Heath |
| Edited by |
|
Production company | Invicta Productions |
| Distributed by | British Empire Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 78 minutes |
| Country | Australia |
| Language | English |
| Box office | £2,200 (Australia)[2] |
The Man They Could Not Hang is a 1934 Australian film directed by Raymond Longford about the life of John Babbacombe Lee, whose story had been filmed previously in 1912 and 1921. These silent films were called "one of the greatest box-office features that ever came out of this country."[3] The sound film was not as successful.[4]
In Devonshire, John Lee works for wealthy spinster Emma Keys. On the night he is engaged to be married, Keys is murdered and Lee is arrested on circumstantial evidence and is convicted of murder. He is condemned to death but when the authorities try to execute him the trap doors will not open. They fail a second time and his sentence is commuted to life imprisonment. There is a sub-plot about smuggling and secret service agents.[5]
Cast
- Ronald Roberts as John Babbacombe Lee
- Arthur W. Sterry as John Lee Snr
- Ethel Bashford as Mrs Lee
- Olive Sinclair as Miss Keyse
- Patricia Minchin as Eliza Parrish
- Ethel Gabriel as Jane Allen
- Claire Barnes as Kate Farmer
- Sam Stern as Bertrand
- Les Warton as Ted Meeks
- George Doran as Captain Giles
- Leo Starke as Captain Hill
- Nugent Harrington as Tim Sanders
- Bobbie Beaumont as Polly Sanders
- W. Newton Carroll as Ned Sawkins
Production
The production company responsible for the film, Invicta, was formed by J.A. Lipman, in 1933 with capital of £5,000.[6] Lipman hired Raymond Longford and produced the film under the name of 'Rigby C. Tearle'. The story had been filmed twice before to great box office success. Eric Bedford wrote the scenario.[7]
Lipman leased the No. 2 studios of Cinesound Productions at Rushcutters Bay, which had just been used for When the Kellys Rode. Shooting started on 12 March 1934 with Cinesound crew.[8]
The cast included Arthur W. Sterry, who exhibited the 1912 film version of the story and directed the 1921 version.
The scene of Lee being released from prison was shot at Parramatta Gaol.[9]
Some reels of the film were almost destroyed in a fire but survived. "The fellow always was lucky" quipped Everyones.[10]
