Ten Thousand Miles In The Southern Cross
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''Ten Thousand Miles in the Southern Cross'' is a 1922 New Zealand travelogue made by George Tarr during a 1922 voyage in the South Pacific. Most shots are of indigenous tribes e.g. ritual dances, though one is of a bishop in full canonical regalia, presumably at a Melanesian mission. Most of the shots are wide shots, with less than 10% close-ups, including one of a small child smoking a cigarette with tears running down his cheeks. Originally thought lost, 16 minutes of the film were found in Australia in 1995. This part was shot in the Solomon Islands and four other Melanesian locations. On a poster the title is “10,000 miles in the S.Y. Southern Cross” (S.Y. presumably for Steam Yacht), and says “A wonderful trip to the sea girt islands of the Western Pacific”. Sam Edwards says “Tarr’s images leave the viewer with a satisfying sense both of freshness and enlightenment”.


References

*''New Zealand Film 1912-1996'' by Helen Martin & Sam Edwards p31 (1997, Oxford University Press, Auckland)


External links


1922 newspaper article on showing of film
1922 films New Zealand documentary films Films set in Oceania 1922 documentary films Black-and-white documentary films Films set in the 1920s Films shot in the Solomon Islands Films based on New Zealand novels New Zealand silent films Documentary films about Oceania Travelogues 1920s English-language films 1920s rediscovered films {{silent-documentary-film-stub