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The Adorable Outcast

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Wikipedia article




'The Adorable Outcast' is a 1928 Australian silent film directed by Norman Dawn about an adventurer who romances an island girl. The script was based on Beatrice Grimshaw's novel 'Conn of the Coral Seas'. It was one of the most expensive films made in Australia until that time, and was Dawn's follow up to 'For the Term of His Natural Life' (1927). It did not perform as well at the box office and helped cause Australasian Films to abandon feature film production.

For the American market, the film was retitled 'Black Cargoes of the South Seas'.

Synopsis



A young adventurer, Stephen Conn (Edmund Burns) is in love with an island girl, Luya (Edith Roberts). An evil blackbirder Fursey (Walter Long) kidnaps Luya to get hands on some gold, but Stephen rescues her with the help of Luya's tribe. When it is revealed that Luya's parents were white, she and Stephen are married.Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, 'Australian Film 19001977: A Guide to Feature Film Production', Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 144.

Cast



*Edith Roberts as Luya

*Edmund Burns as Stephen Conn

*Walter Long as Fursey

*Jessica Harcourt as Diedre Rose

*John Gavin as Carberry

*Katherine Dawn as Elizabeth

*Arthur McLaglen as Iron Devil

*Arthur Tauchert as Mack

*Fred Twitcham as Sir John Blackberry

*Compton Coutts as Pooch

*William O'Hanlon as pearler

*Claude Turton as pearler

Production



The big-budget film was shot mostly on location in Fiji from April to June 1927, with some studio work done at Bondi Junction in Sydney.[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article58327835 "MOVIE WORK IN FIJI." 'Sunday Times (Perth)' 26 Jun 1927: 34] accessed 6 December 2011[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article21867198 "ROMANCE ISLE. FILM ACTORS IN FIJI." 'The Brisbane Courier (Qld)' 30 Jul 1927: 11] accessed 6 December 2011 The three leads, Edith Roberts, Edmund Burns and Walter Long, were all established Hollywood actors.[http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article51432004 "CLAMOUR OF THE SOUTH SEAS." 'Examiner (Launceston, Tas)' 23 Jul 1927: 7] accessed 6 December 2011 The ambitious filming schedule involved "500 war canoes and outriggers, and 2000 native warriors dancing in full war dress with clubs and spears".

Reception



The film initially performed strongly at the box office but soon tailed off, and expected overseas success did not eventuate. It was estimated the combined losses of this and Norman Dawn's earlier film, 'For the Term of His Natural Life' (1927) came to 30,000.Graham Shirley and Brian Adams, 'Australian Cinema: The First Eighty Years', Currency Press, 1989 p93

It was released in the US as 'Black Cargoes of the South Seas'.

Fifteen minutes of the film are in the possession of Australia's National Film and Sound Archive.[http://www.silentera.com/PSFL/data/A/AdorableOutcast1928.html 'The Adorable Outcast' at silentera.com]

References




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