Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1911


Called Back (1911 film)

Buy Called Back (1911 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Called Back' is a 1911 Australian feature-length film directed by W. J. Lincoln based on a popular play which was adapted from an 1883 novel by Hugh Conway. Although the movie was a popular successGraham Shirley and Brian Adams, 'Australian Cinema: The First Eighty Years', Currency Press, 1989, p42 it is now considered a lost film.

It was one of several films Lincoln made with the Tait family, who had produced 'The Story of the Kelly Gang'.

Plot



In Italy, Dr Ceneri gives money to support Garibaldi, including money meant for his orphaned niece and nephew, Pauline and Anthony. When they grow up, they learn of what he did with the money, and Anthony is killed by the villainous Macari. This is seen by Pauline who goes insane, and the blind Gilbert Vaughan. Vaughan regains his sight, Pauline regains her sanity, and they are married while Macari is arrested.

Cast



*William Quinn[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0003744/fullcredits?ref_=tt_cl_sm#cast 'Called Back' (1911)] at IMDb

*Arthur Stein

Production



The play had been popular in Australia as a vehicle for George Rignold. The film was shot at the studio of Amalgamated Pictures in St Kilda, Melbourne. There was location filming around St Kilda with St Kilda station standing in for Euston station in London.

Release



In April 1911 'The Bulletin' said

Taits' Melbourne tabernacle, the Glaciarium, has commenced a special production of "Called Back", with vocal accompaniments by a lady singer. Extra music is also supplied by an energetic orchestra, while a lecturers baritone describes the stirring incidents in organ tones.


Screenings of the film were often accompanied by a lecturer, J Ennis.

Critical

The 'Adelaide Daily Herald' wrote that "Australian cinematographic productions lose nothing by comparison with imported films, and 'Called Back' is as thrilling and interesting a picture as could be wished for. It is 2000 ft. in length, and is typically Australian from start to finish. The acting has been done in the bush, and the atmosphere o! the gum trees runs through, the film."

The 'Bendigo Advertiser' said "the incidents in the film are splendidly enacted, close attention being paid to details."

The 'Prahran Telegraph' wrote:

The work of the adapter has been well done, so that incident follows incident, and the connective explanations thrown on the screen enable anyone unacquainted with the novel to follow the plot with ease. But to supplement this a descriptive narrative is given by a lecturer who voice his heard throughout the theatre. There are many bits of the open-air work which are familiar to St. Kilda people, and the death of Macari, the conspirator, takes place, if we mistake not, at Sandringham. The performance is of a thrilling nature, and holds the audience in rapt attention, while the song Pauline is plantively sung behind the curtain.


'The Bulletin' wrote "the Tait presentation of "Called Back" on the biograph is very creditable. The cast is not pretentious, but does fairly. The ideal in Australia would be Beatrice Holloway as Pauline, Rignoid or Mervale as Macari, Athol wood as Ceneri, and Roberts as Vaughan. How well "Called Back" opensbetter than any other work of fiction, I think. You are enthralled on the first page."

References




Buy Called Back (1911 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1911



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1100391064.