The Secret Of The Skies
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''The Secret of the Skies'' is a 1934 Australian film directed by
A. R. Harwood Alexander Roy Harwood (1897–1980), better known as A. R. Harwood, or Dick Harwood, was an Australian film director and producer who also worked in exhibition. He was inspired to become a filmmaker when he was posted to Tahiti to work for an insu ...
about a bank robber who crashes an aircraft in remote bush. The story was inspired by the 1931 disappearance of the Australian National Airways aircraft the ''
Southern Cloud The ''Southern Cloud'', registered VH-UMF, was one of five Avro 618 Ten three-engined aircraft flying daily airline services between Australian cities for Australian National Airways in the early 1930s. Disappearance On 21 March 1931, the ''S ...
''.


Plot

Hal Wayne (Norman Shepherd), a bank clerk, has absconded with £10,000 of his bank's money. He hijacks an aircraft, the ''Golden Eagle'', which crashes in the mountains. Wayne steals the remaining food and abandons the others to their death. He is driven half-mad in the wilderness and throws away his money before being found by a prospector and returned to civilisation. But he is haunted by guilt and three years later confesses to police.


Cast

* Paul Allsop as Larry Hamilton * Norman Banks as first announcer * Ella Bromley as Anne Walters * John D'Arcy as Captain Sinclair * Jimmy Dee as Monty Wright *
Guy Hastings Guy Hastings (died 15 March 1941) was an English-born actor who worked extensively in Australian theatre, radio and film. He arrived in Australia in 1912 and worked for Bert Bailey in the original production of '' On Our Selection''. In the 1930s ...
as Detective Palmer * Fred Patey as Frederick Holtz * Norman Shepherd as Hal Wayne * Ada Koradgi as Miss Mckenzie * Eddie Balmer as second announcer


Production

''The Secret of the Skies'' was partly shot in Cinesound Production's new studio facility in St Kilda, Melbourne in July 1933.


Release

Harwood managed to arrange distribution through Universal although he later claimed that the release was delayed too long. Critical reception was generally poor. One reviewer said:
"If one is to spend an hour on a mountain top with seven, stranded travellers it is desirable that they should be amusing or interesting in some way or other. Except for the pilot (played extremely well by John Darcy) they are ill at ease, and their conversation is starchy. This conversational stiffness is emphasised by the lack of action, particularly on the part of the camera, which is set down in front of the unhappy party, and stays there without a movement for minutes on end. But the film has its moments of vitality. The actual crash is first-rate; and quite equal to similar instances in American pictures... In some of the scenes in the bush one is made to feel the remoteness of the travellers and the hopelessness of their position; but elsewhere stagey treatment and acting often rob the film of the spontaneity and the dramatic intensity it should have possessed."
Despite a production cost of several thousand pounds the film only returned £325 to the producers."Some screen reflections."
'' The Courier-Mail'' (Brisbane), 29 February 1940, p. 9 via ''National Library of Australia'', retrieved: 5 April 2012.


References


Notes


Bibliography

* Pike, Andrew and Ross Cooper. ''Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production''. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998. .


External links


''The Secret of the Skies''
at IMDb
''The Secret of the Skies''
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 ...

''The Secret of the Skies''
at Oz Movies {{DEFAULTSORT:Secret of the Skies, The 1934 films Australian aviation films Australian black-and-white films 1930s action films Australian action films Australian romantic drama films 1934 romantic drama films