Breaking The News (1912 Film)
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''Breaking the News'' is a 1912 Australian melodrama film directed by
W. J. Lincoln William Joseph Lincoln (1870 – 18 August 1917) was an Australian playwright, theatre manager, film director and screenwriter in the silent film, silent era. He produced, directed and/or wrote 23 films between 1911 and 1916. One obituary calle ...
based on John Longstaff's 1887 painting of the same name. It is considered a lost film.


Plot

According to ''Table Talk'' "The story deals with life in a mining centre in Australia, the play opening with the rescue of Roberts by a party of prospectors after he has been deserted by his mate, who clears off with the gold. The treacherous mate through threats and scheming eventually weds the daughter of the mine manager at whose mine lie is employed as foreman. Roberts also turns up at the mine and is employed; he is at times irresponsible and is ever threatening. The false mate decides to do away with him, and knocks him on the head when below, and in seeking a'place to bury him strikes water and floods the mine. They are both rescued, but the foreman dies, and the father breaks the news to his daughter, who is nursing her young infant. The story ends happily, for the true lovers are re-united and the mine strikes rich." According to another listing the main scenes were: *The Never Never Land *Fight for Water *Deep Lead Calm *To Win a Wife *Above the Plains *Plighted Love *Galatea Mine *Memory of the past *Broken Hill - chambers *Stock Exchange, Melbourne *Rise in Shares *Face of the Drive *Salting the Mine *The Marshes of Sin *Face to Face *The Wedding Morn *Crib Time *At the Shaft *Roberts Disguised *Dean Fraser's Home *Terrible Danger *Down the Shaft *Murder of Roberts *The Flooded Mine *Like Rats in a Trap *Fraser's Rescue *The Flame of True Love Never Dies


Cast

*Harrie Ireland *Arthur Styan


Production

The film was shot at Diamond Creek, near Melbourne.


Reception

The movie was a popular success with critics drawing particular attention to a scene of an underground mine being flooded. The Melbourne ''Herald'' said it "was attracting large crowds" and was of "absorbing interest". According to advertising "It is typically Australian, and, judging by the tremendous enthusiasm that it evokes nightly, .it appeals to Australians as no other picture-drama has ever done." In March 1912 ''The Bulletin'' wrote "three cheers for the big black and white item, ''Breaking the News''. The yarn is excellently acted and photographed, but the plot is not too conspicuous for common-sense." ''Punch'' said "as a biographic achievement, is regarded as a work of art." ''The Age'' said "The tupping of an underground train and the finding of a mine are scenes of realism. The audience was enthusiastic." The ''Launceston Examiner'' said the film was "of great length, but never lacking in interest, is a remarkably realistic Australian mining story, embodying some of the most thrilling situations conceived in dramatic form. The acting is of a high standard, the setting true to life, and the whole atmosphere of the picture realistic and impressive. A power ful plot, abounding in exciting incidents, deals with life in the mining fields, which are clearly depicted as the environnient in which the film has been enacted."


References


External links


''Breaking the News''
at IMDb
''Breaking the News''
at
National Film and Sound Archive The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA), known as ScreenSound Australia from 1999 to 2004, is Australia's audiovisual archive, responsible for developing, preserving, maintaining, promoting and providing access to a national co ...

''Breaking the News''
at
AustLit AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource (also known as AustLit: Australian Literature Gateway; and AustLit: The Resource for Australian Literature), usually referred to simply as AustLit, is an internet-based, non-profit collaboration betwee ...
1912 films Australian black-and-white films Australian silent feature films Lost Australian drama films Silent Australian drama films 1912 drama films 1912 lost films Films directed by W. J. Lincoln 1910s English-language films 1910s Australian films {{Australia-silent-film-stub