Major Wilson's Last Stand Explained

Major Wilson's Last Stand
Director:Joseph Rosenthal
Producer:Warwick Trading Co. Ltd
Screenplay:Frank E. Fillis
Based On:Historical events of the Shangani Patrol (1893)
Starring:Texas Jack
Peter Lobengula
Frank E. Fillis
Studio:Levi, Jones & Company
Runtime:125 ft[1]
Country:Great Britain
Language:Silent
English intertitles

Major Wilson's Last Stand is an 1899 British short silent war film based upon the historical accounts of the Shangani Patrol. The film was adapted from Savage South Africa, a stage show depicting scenes from both the First Matabele War and the Second Matabele War which opened at the Empress Theatre, Earls Court, on 8 May 1899. It was shot by Joseph Rosenthal for Warwick Trading Co. Ltd.[2]

Copies of the film originally sold for £3. It was shown to audiences at the Olympic Theatre in London and at the Refined Concert Company in New Zealand.[3]

Story

The studio's original description is as follows:[4]

Major Wilson and his brave men are seen in laager in order to snatch a brief rest after a long, forced march. They are suddenly awakened by the shouts of the savages, who surround them on all sides. The expected reinforcements arrived too late. The Major calls upon his men to show the enemy how a handful of British soldiers can play a losing game as well as a winning one. He bids them to stand shoulder to shoulder and fight and die for their queen. The horses are seen to fall, and from the rampart of dead horses, the heroic band fights to the last round of revolver ammunition. The Major, who is the last to fall, crawls to the top of the heads of dead men, savages, and horses and makes every one of the few remaining cartridges find its mark until his life is cut short by the thrust of an assegai in the hands of a savage, who attacks him from behind. Before he falls, however, he fires his last bullet into the fleeing carcass of the savage, who drops dead. The Major also expires, and death-like silence prevails. The most awe-inspiring cinematograph picture ever produced.

Cast

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Barnes, John . Filming the Boer War . Bishopgate Press . London . 1992 . 74 . 978-18-52190-46-0.
  2. 26 March 1900 . Theater Royal Timaru . The Timaru Herald . LXIV . 3220 . 1 . New Zealand .
  3. 26 March 1900 . Theater Royal Timaru . The Timaru Herald . LXIV . 3220 . 1 . New Zealand .
  4. Arthur C. Brookes . Films . The Photographic Dealer and Optical and Scientific Apparatus Trades Journal . VII . 43 . December 1899 . 147 . London .
  5. Barrett, Cathy J. . Heather Valiance . The Wild West Show: Socio-historic Spectacle and Characters as Circus . Australasian Drama Studies . October 1999 . 125.
  6. Book: Shephard, Ben . Kitty and the Prince . Profile Books . London . 2003 . 978-18-61975-10-2.
  7. Jackie . Talented Circus Man with Big Ideas Spared No Cost on Putting on a Good Spectacle . Cape Argus (South Africa) . 17 February 2011 . 15.
  8. Week by Week . Bulawayo Chronicle . 9 December 1922 . 2.