Marion Hastings, absent from her Australian home, Rangle River Station, for many years while completing her education in Europe, receives a letter from Dick Drake, her father's ranch foreman, demanding she return home immediately. Marion, together with her chaperon, Aunt Abbie, flies home.


Is this actually worth your time? Look, if you have a soft spot for 1930s black-and-white dramas where everyone speaks a bit too clearly, you'll probably enjoy Rangle River. If you get bored by ranch politics or stiff romantic tension, maybe skip it. It's not exactly high art, but it has that weird, charming energy of ...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Clarence G. Badger

Clarence G. Badger
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"Is this actually worth your time? Look, if you have a soft spot for 1930s black-and-white dramas where everyone speaks a bit too clearly, you'll probably enjoy Rangle River. If you get bored by ranch politics or stiff romantic tension, maybe skip it. It's not exactly high art, but it has that weird, charming energy of an early Australian talkie that feels like it’s trying to be a western without quite knowing how. The whole thing kicks off with Marion Hastings coming home from Europe. She’s got..."
Elsa Chauvel, Charles Chauvel, Zane Grey
Australia

