The Man Who Forgot (1927 film)
The Man Who Forgot is a 1927 silent Australian feature film which marked the directorial debut of A. R. Harwood. It is considered a lost film.
The Man Who Forgot | |
---|---|
Directed by | A. R. Harwood |
Produced by | A. R. Harwood |
Starring | Walter Nicholls William Hallam |
Cinematography | William Hallam |
Distributed by | Walter Nicholls William Hallam A. R. Harwood |
Release date | 1927 |
Running time | 5,000 feet |
Country | Australia |
Production
Little is known about the movie apart from the fact it was a low-budget melodrama shot outdoors to save on studio costs. The story included scenes at the Ascot racecourse in Melbourne, a fight on the brink of the Werribee Gorge, timber felling in the Dandenong Rangers, and an escape by the hero in an aeroplane at the Essendon Aerodrome.[1]
Release
Harwood distributed the film himself in partnership with his leading actors Nicholls and Hallam. They showed it on a double bill with Jewelled Nights (1925) around rural Victoria. Harwood, Nicholls and Hallam then announced plans to make a second feature together, a farce called Struth, but the project was abandoned and Harwood spent the next few years in distribution.[1]
Cast
- William Hallam as Crazy Dan
- Walter Nicholls as Stephen Jackson
References
- Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998 p141