A Girl of the Bush | |
Director: | Franklyn Barrett |
Producer: | Franklyn Barrett |
Starring: | Vera James |
Studio: | Barrett's Australian Productions |
Runtime: | 6,000 feet[1] |
Country: | Australia |
Language: | Silent film English intertitles |
A Girl of the Bush is a 1921 Australian silent film directed by Franklyn Barrett. It is one of the few films from Barrett to survive in its entirety today.
Lorna Denver manages Kangaroo Flat sheep station and is pursued by two men, evil Oswald and handsome young surveyor, Tom Wilson.
Lorna gives shelter to a baby that has survived an attack by aboriginals, but Tom thinks the baby is hers. This upsets Lorna who breaks it off with him.
Oswald is murdered and Tom is arrested. A Chinese cook reveals that the real killer was the father of a woman who had been seduced by Oswald.
The script was heavily influenced by the plays The Squatter's Daughter and On Our Selection.[2]
This was the first of three films Barrett made for his own company.[3] Shooting began in October 1920 at the Fremantle Station near Bathurst.[4]
The film was widely distributed and appears to have been a success at the box office.[2]
Vera James' father bought the rights to distribute the film in New Zealand.[5]