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The Double Event (1911 film)

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Wikipedia article




'The Double Event' is a 1911 Australian feature-length film directed by W. J. Lincoln based on the first novel by Nat Gould, which had been adapted several times for the stage, notably by Bland Holt.

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

It is considered a lost film.

Plot



Jack Drayton discovers his brother is an attempted murderer but won't expose him out of fear of ruining the family name. He leaves England in secrecy and starts a new life in Australia under the name of Jack Marston. He falls in love with Edith the daughter of a Sydney bookmaker, John Kingdon. He enters his horse, Caloola, in the Melbourne Cup and it wins, despite the attempts of evil Fletcher.

Fletcher later shoots a lady he is trying to blackmail and is chased across town but is eventually cornered in Chinatown and falls to his death. Jack marries Edith and returns to England.[http://www.natgould.org/the_double_event 'The Double Event' at www.natgould.org]

Cast



*The Bland Holt Company

*Martyn Hagen

Production



The story was based on an 1891 novel by Nat Gould, 'The Double Event, or A Tale of the Melbourne Cup'. This had been successfully adapted for the stage in Australia in 1893 by George DarrellEric Irvin, 'Gentleman George: King of Melodrama', University of Qld, 1980 p 182-183 and Bland Holt. Holt's company had disbanded in 1909 and his actors performed in the movie. Several scenes were shot at Flemington Racecourse in Melbourne.Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, 'Australian Film 19001977: A Guide to Feature Film Production', Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 27.

Other scenes were shot at a studio in St Kilda. Assisting Lincoln was Sam Crew.

Release



The film was released in Melbourne on Caulfield Cup Day 1911. In November 1911 'The Bulletin' wrote that "At the Glaciarium (Melb.). last week, the Taits unreeled a long photodrama of "The Double Event", adapted by W.J. Lincoln. This up-to-date local production seems intended to educate the guileless in the ways of horses and the wiles of villains."

References




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