Tall Timbers | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ken G. Hall |
Produced by | Ken G. Hall |
Written by | Frank Harvey |
Based on | story by Frank Hurley |
Starring |
Frank Leighton Shirley Ann Richards |
Music by | Lindley Evans |
Cinematography | George Heath |
Edited by | William Shepherd |
Production
company |
|
Distributed by |
British Empire Films (Aust) Paramount Pictures (UK) |
Release date
|
3 August 1937 (Australia) January 1938 (UK) |
Running time
|
89 mins |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | ₤18,000 |
Tall Timbers is a 1937 action melodrama set in the timber industry directed by Ken G. Hall.
Forestry graduate Jim Thornton saves a young woman, Joan Burbridge, from drowning at Palm Beach. He later turns up to work at her adopted father Stephen's timber company.
Burbridge is secretly being undermined by his treacherous foreman Darley and competitor Charles Blake. Blake is also engaged to Joan despite sleeping with Darley's sister Claire. Thornton eventually exposes Darley and takes his job, and organises a timber drive. The drive involves dynamiting trees at the top of a ridge, causing trees along the whole hillside to collapse in a chain reaction.
When Darley finds out Blake has been sleeping with Joan he shoots him dead, and Joan and Thornton are almost trapped amongst the falling timber trees. The trees kill Darley, but Joan and Thornton manage to survive. Thorton reveals himself to be Stephen Burbridge's long-lost son, and he and Joan are married.
Cinesound Productions had intended to make a film of the timber industry since its formation in 1932. In 1935 they announced they were going to make a big screen adaptation of the William Hatfield story Big Timber as their next film after Thoroughbred (1936), starring an imported Hollywood actor. However Cinesound made Orphans of the Wilderness and It Isn't Done instead.
Eventually Hall decided not to adapt Hatfield's story, which the author later turned into a novel. He instead used an original story by Frank Hurley also set in the timber industry. This story was rewritten by Frank Harvey.
Hall claims the script had no connection with the 1926 Australasian Films picture Tall Timber, which he had never seen.
The two stars, Shirley Ann Richards and Frank Leighton, had both appeared in other Cinesound films, and Hall supported them with a strong support cast. Aileen Britton's part was created especially for her.
The special effects were done by George Kenyon, who Hall hired from J.C. Williamson Ltd and went on to do effects for all of Cinesound's subsequent features. Two attempts were made to stage a timber drive on location at Gloucester but the drives failed to work. Kenyon then made a model of the timber slope in the studio and staged it in miniature, using cut up sponges as foliage and knocking them over with wires.