The Shattered Illusion | |
Director: | A. G. Harbrow |
Starring: | J. Robertson Aiken |
Cinematography: | Reg Robinson |
Studio: | Victorian Film Productions |
Runtime: | 5,000 feet (45 mins) |
Country: | Australia |
Language: | Silent film English intertitles |
The Shattered Illusion is a 1928 Australian silent film about a rich financier who is shipwrecked. Unlike many Australian silent films, a copy of it exists today.[1]
Financier Lewis Alden has a nervous breakdown and loses his memory. He joins the crew of a ship and is marooned after a storm at sea, along with Joyce. The shock of his causes him to regain his memory. One day he discovers a drifting lifeboat containing several newspapers and he discovers to his dismay that his companies have thrived in his absence and he is not as important as he once thought. He finds comfort from Joyce and after the two of them are rescued, decides to live on her family's plantation in New Guinea.
The film was shot in July and August 1927, with interiors filmed in a backyard studio in Abbotsford, Melbourne.[1] [2]
It was the first movie from Victorian Film Productions, who later made a comedy short, The Tramp (1929), and the feature, Tiger Island (1930).