
The Story of the Kelly Gang
Summary
A spectral echo of cinematic ambition, "The Story of the Kelly Gang" manifests as a foundational, yet largely vanished, epic. What remains of its original 70-minute sprawl—mere fragments and tantalizing stills—sketches the audacious saga of Ned Kelly, the 19th-century Australian outlaw whose legend oscillates between folk hero and notorious brigand. The film, a prodigious leap in narrative scope, chronicles Kelly's trajectory from a marginalized youth to the leader of a defiant gang, culminating in his iconic final stand. It attempts to capture the raw, untamed spirit of the Australian frontier, depicting a society grappling with justice, rebellion, and the formation of its own national identity through the lens of a controversial figure who dared to challenge colonial authority. This cinematic artifact, despite its truncated form, offers a profound glimpse into early filmmaking's capacity for complex storytelling and mythologizing.
Synopsis
Originally 70 minutes in running time, only 17 minutes of the world's first full-length narrative feature film survived in stills and other fragments and tell the story of Ned Kelly, an infamous 19th-century Australian outlaw.
Director
Elizabeth Tait, John Tait, Nicholas Brierley, Norman Campbell
Charles Tait








