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Bitter Springs

  • 1950
  • Approved
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
212
YOUR RATING
Bitter Springs (1950)
AdventureDramaHistory

Tommy (Tommy Trinder) is called in to smooth things out after Wally King (Chips Rafferty) encroaches upon Aboriginal tribal ground.Tommy (Tommy Trinder) is called in to smooth things out after Wally King (Chips Rafferty) encroaches upon Aboriginal tribal ground.Tommy (Tommy Trinder) is called in to smooth things out after Wally King (Chips Rafferty) encroaches upon Aboriginal tribal ground.

  • Director
    • Ralph Smart
  • Writers
    • W.P. Lipscomb
    • Monja Danischewsky
    • Ralph Smart
  • Stars
    • Tommy Trinder
    • Chips Rafferty
    • Gordon Jackson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    212
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ralph Smart
    • Writers
      • W.P. Lipscomb
      • Monja Danischewsky
      • Ralph Smart
    • Stars
      • Tommy Trinder
      • Chips Rafferty
      • Gordon Jackson
    • 7User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos3

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    Top cast10

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    Tommy Trinder
    Tommy Trinder
    • Tommy
    Chips Rafferty
    Chips Rafferty
    • Wally King
    Gordon Jackson
    Gordon Jackson
    • Mac
    Jean Blue
    • Ma King
    Michael Pate
    Michael Pate
    • Trooper
    Charles 'Bud' Tingwell
    Charles 'Bud' Tingwell
    • John King
    • (as Charles Tingwell)
    Nonnie Peifer
    • Emma King
    • (as Nonnie Piper)
    Nicky Yardley
    • Charlie
    Henry Murdoch
    • Black Jack
    • (as Henry Murdock)
    Steve Dodd
    • Aborigine
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ralph Smart
    • Writers
      • W.P. Lipscomb
      • Monja Danischewsky
      • Ralph Smart
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.1212
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    Featured reviews

    8Peter_C_Hall

    An English western ?. Maybe; but there is much more.

    The previous reviews document well about how this has been influenced by American westerns.

    However, don't let this put you off in any way.

    This movie is not a western movie with an Australian wrapping. It is not an English attempt at "Cowboys & Indians".

    This movie documents well how the conflict between white settlers & Aboriginals started. White man wants land & water. White man cannot comprehend the Aboriginal culture of land & water ownership, and how it works. (Communally owned) Two opposing worlds collide. Two misunderstandings. Two cultures meet at a "fault line".

    Remember that this is 1950. Australia has a "white Australia Policy". Aboriginals can't even vote !. This is a very brave film that tackled white Austalia's prejudices at the time.

    The acting from Chips Rafferty is at its best. The Aboriginal actors did a great job too.

    This movie should be shown to anyone interested in Australian history, and how "we got here" today.
    7eurothozza

    Flashes of insight and tension

    This Wallaby Western is an intriguing slice of Anglo-Australian cinematic history, with moments of real insight and drama. Despite various anachronisms, the film sits within an Australian cinematic tradition that is essentially empathetic to the Aboriginal experience of colonisation.

    In a sequence voiced by "The Trooper" (Michael Pate) we hear: "They call the natives that live there Karagany. The spring has been their tribal home for a thousand years. Two perhaps. Since the time we were savages anyway. A thousand years. One day, a bloke walks into the government office in Adelaide 800 miles away, bangs down eighty quid, they hand him a bit of stamped paper and Karagany haven't got a tribal home anymore [...] I'll tell you this. They do know that waterhole is their tribal ground and no bit of paper is going to convince them otherwise."

    The film belongs to the period when the British Empire was rapidly dissipating, and the quintessentially British Ealing Studios was making a series of films on Australian themes. Fans of classic Australian cinema will enjoy the presence of Chips Rafferty and Bud Tingwell, but the The Sydney Morning Herald proclaimed at the time, it's 130 South Australian Aboriginal cast member who steal the show with their "fine natural acting, graceful body movements, dramatic expressions of emotion and their joyous laughter".

    The director seems to have been unresolved in his mind if he was to make a comedy or tragedy, and ultimately chickens out of both. And yet there is something here that seven decades later still shows insight and empathy to the early struggles, battles, injustices and hopes that moulded Australia.
    6dsewizzrd-1

    Them darn injuns !

    Chips Rafferty stars in this semi-realistic fable slash western film based in the mid-north of South Australia.

    A family move to a selection in South Australia together with some English immigrants, a con man and his son and a Scottish carpenter.

    Lucky for them, the land has already been cleared (it would have been densely covered in mallee forest at the time, but was completely cleared by 1950). They build a log cabin in an area with not many trees but plenty of loose stones, although the plot reason for this is later revealed. They drink from metal cups but have a wooden bucket and a thatched roof (rather than roofing iron) on their house.

    When trouble arises with aborigines, they decide to shoot them, this being completely illegal of course.
    6malcolmgsw

    ealings Australian western

    Ealing Studios had a flirtation with Australia just after the war.This clearly was their attempt to do a western.The sheep drive with hostile aborigines is virtually identical to many cattle drives with warring Apaches.As usual there are the usual disparate characters.The old reliable Chips Rafferty and the soon to be Doctor in EW10,Charles Tingwall.However when it comes to Tommy Trinder one starts to scratch ones head.One can only assume that Ealing tried to build him in to their substitute for George Formby.The one consistent note of all his Ealing performances is that he was no actor.The outback is well photographed and the scenes with the aborigines are quite interesting as we do learn a little about their culture.
    5Chase_Witherspoon

    Australian Western

    Pioneers in the rugged Australian outback drove a thousand head of sheep into the bush but run afoul the local Indigenous population over custodianship of the land and hunting rights. Perennial ocker Chips Rafferty pairs with cockney Tommy Trinder, whose son is later abducted by aborigines as retribution after Bud Tingwell kills one of the tribe during a heated stoush. Trinder sets out to retrieve his son and also ends up prisoner, but the two guards left to watch the pair are beguiled by his amateur magic tricks enabling both to escape.

    Scot Gordon Jackson and Aussies Bud Tingwell and Michael Pate tag along for a little brawn and the occasional moral disagreement with the short tempered Rafferty (particularly Jackson), while half caste tracker and interpreter Henry Murdoch abandons the group and takes up with the aborigines in opposition to Rafferty's rough-handedness.

    Standard Australian bush tucker from the era, with apparent racially prejudiced subject matter that might challenge some of today's audience sensitivities, but without commenting on the socio-political atmosphere, there's enough action, landscape, tribal culture and light drama to mildly entertain.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Chips Rafferty plays the father of Charles 'Bud' Tingwell's character, despite being less than 14 years his senior.
    • Quotes

      Trooper: They call the natives that live there Karagany. The spring has been their tribal home for a thousand years. Two perhaps. Since the time we were savages anyway. A thousand years. One day, a bloke walks into the government office in Adelaide 800 miles away, bangs down eighty quid, they hand him a bit of stamped paper and Karagany haven't got a tribal home anymore.

    • Connections
      Featured in Century of Cinema: 100 ans de cinéma: 100 ans de cinéma australien - 40 000 ans de rêve (1996)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 24, 1950 (Australia)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Australia
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Överfallet vid Bitter Springs
    • Filming locations
      • Warren Gorge, South Australia, Australia
    • Production company
      • Ealing Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 29 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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