The Explorers - Burke and Wills
Sunday, 6 May 2007 11:29 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So for Part 2 of my project: Martin Shaw as Robert O'Hara Burke (hee - the other connection between MS and Burke just hit me then!), the Australian explorer who crossed the continent from south to North, and came so close to making it back again...
I think, from what I can gather, that this was made by the BBC as one of The Explorers series around 1972, but was re-released in America, with Anthony Quinn introducing it (which is the version I've got) in 1975/6? Does anyone have any better information than that? Does anyone have any other information than that?!
There seems to be very little about this one - or else my ability to google has failed me. On the bright side, there are screencaps under the cut!
Terrible quality I know - apologies. Someone more ept than I could no doubt clean these up, but I shall just post what I can! I guess we're lucky to have anything at all, from back then!
Burke at the beginning of the expedition, August 1860! (D'you know, this was a story that I was never told in school - which, bearing in mind I went to school in Australia, seems a bit odd now...)

He's not very happy that the camel driver has been feeding the camels rum - he doesn't want the men to get into it! The camel driver swears they need it to protect them from scurvy... (Funny how it doesn't seem to have helped sailors any!) But would you wanna be on the wrong side of that glare?!

Burke and Wills made it from Melbourne to the Gulf of Carpentaria - although they turned back before they actually saw the ocean, for fear they wouldn't be able to make it home to tell the tale (ooh, ironic...) - arriving at the depot camp to find that their company had left for the town of Menindee, earlier the same day to help one of the men who had been badly injured.

They attempt to travel on themselves, but their last camel dies, and they are forced to return to the camp. Tragically, and unbeknown to them, their company had returned to search for them while they were away, but they had not left anything to suggest they had been there, and so the camp was again deserted.

They managed to survive for a time, but help did not arrive, and they struck out once more. "The blacks" apparently tried to feed them, but... well, I'm sorry, this is Burke and Wills, it's not a happy ending!

As for our MS, I thought he did an ace job - it's him but it's not him, which I guess is his talent! He seemed alot more natural than in some things - maybe because he was playing a rather grey character, perhaps? A few "act-y" moments, but pretty good I thought...
I think, from what I can gather, that this was made by the BBC as one of The Explorers series around 1972, but was re-released in America, with Anthony Quinn introducing it (which is the version I've got) in 1975/6? Does anyone have any better information than that? Does anyone have any other information than that?!
There seems to be very little about this one - or else my ability to google has failed me. On the bright side, there are screencaps under the cut!
Terrible quality I know - apologies. Someone more ept than I could no doubt clean these up, but I shall just post what I can! I guess we're lucky to have anything at all, from back then!
Burke at the beginning of the expedition, August 1860! (D'you know, this was a story that I was never told in school - which, bearing in mind I went to school in Australia, seems a bit odd now...)
He's not very happy that the camel driver has been feeding the camels rum - he doesn't want the men to get into it! The camel driver swears they need it to protect them from scurvy... (Funny how it doesn't seem to have helped sailors any!) But would you wanna be on the wrong side of that glare?!
Burke and Wills made it from Melbourne to the Gulf of Carpentaria - although they turned back before they actually saw the ocean, for fear they wouldn't be able to make it home to tell the tale (ooh, ironic...) - arriving at the depot camp to find that their company had left for the town of Menindee, earlier the same day to help one of the men who had been badly injured.
They attempt to travel on themselves, but their last camel dies, and they are forced to return to the camp. Tragically, and unbeknown to them, their company had returned to search for them while they were away, but they had not left anything to suggest they had been there, and so the camp was again deserted.
They managed to survive for a time, but help did not arrive, and they struck out once more. "The blacks" apparently tried to feed them, but... well, I'm sorry, this is Burke and Wills, it's not a happy ending!
As for our MS, I thought he did an ace job - it's him but it's not him, which I guess is his talent! He seemed alot more natural than in some things - maybe because he was playing a rather grey character, perhaps? A few "act-y" moments, but pretty good I thought...