Home

Browse titles

How it works

Join Now

Sign in

Help


Genres

World Cinema

UK Premier

US Premier

Indie-Arthouse Cinema

Film Noir

UK Classics

US Classics

Australian

All genres


showcase

Now Available

Kino Hot Picks

Directors

Actors


collections

Kino All-time Top 100 rental titles

Christmas Movies

Blu-Ray High Definition

Featured Genre

Director's Cut

Actors' Studio

Oscar Winners . . . Best  Picture

AACTA - AFI Winners . . . Best  Picture

Cannes Classics

Members' Top 100 requested Titles


Service

Send a Gift

Contact Us



Titles

Free Trial

Bitter Springs (1950)

<<back  


Director:

Ralph Smart

Starring:

Chips Rafferty, Tommy Trinder, Jean Blue, Gordon Jackson, Henry Murdoch, Michael Pate, Nonnie Piper, Charles 'Bud' Tingwell, Nicky Yardley

Genres:

Action-Adventure, Western, Drama, Australian

Origin:

Australia

Certificate:

G

Languages:

English

Running Time:

83 min

Bitter Springs

synopsis


Bitter Springs was the third Ealing release to be made in Australia, directed this time by Ralph Smart who had been Harry Watt's associate producer on The Overlanders. Bitter Springs is the less successful of the trio, and concerns turn-of-the century pioneers who trek 600 miles to reach land they have bought from the government, only to find it in the possession of an aborigine tribe who have been settled there for centuries and who, as the water supply is only just adequate to support them are not eager to yield to white settlers. There are nasty incidents, an aborigine is murdered, the whites are rescued from siege by the arrival of mounted troops, and the film ends with promises between the two factions to behave and co-operate, a somewhat crude and desperate piece of plot construction. The cast included Tommy Trinder as an ex-circus performer who apparently does not even know how to mount a horse; as in the majority of serious Ealing films he made, Trinder's performance is at variance with the prevailing mood. Chips Rafferty, by now the British idea of a professional Australian, leads the settlers, and the party includes the stalwart Gordon Jackson, a favourite Ealing stock player. It was the last Ealing film to be made at Pagewood for, in spite of the efforts Balcon had made to help the establishment of regular Australian production, Canberra decided not to extend the lease any further, arguing that films were nonessential and the leaseholders non-resident.

 
 

Privacy

FAQs

Terms & Conditions

Plans & Prices

About Us

Facebook

© Copyright Kino 2026. All rights reserved.