free

News

collapse

User Info

 
 
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

* Recent Posts

Re: [SA:MP]House of Sforza | The Elite Power | Estd. 2006 | LS - LV by FrankCivello
[Yesterday at 12:50:43 am]


NOTICE OF PARKING ENFORCEMENT CHANGES by Huntsman
[June 19, 2025, 05:22:50 pm]


Re: Stopping by by Sinister
[June 08, 2025, 01:58:04 pm]


Re: Stopping by by Ehks
[June 04, 2025, 12:25:17 am]


Re: Rest in peace by Stefanrsb
[June 02, 2025, 03:38:02 am]


Re: [SA:MP]House of Sforza | The Elite Power | Estd. 2006 | LS - LV by Stefanrsb
[June 02, 2025, 03:09:22 am]


Re: The Soprano Family | Royal Loyalty by Stefanrsb
[June 02, 2025, 03:00:31 am]


Re: The Gvardia Family || San Fierro's Main Power || Best criminal group of 09/10/11 by Stefanrsb
[June 02, 2025, 02:47:01 am]


Re: BALLAS | In memory of INFERNO 9 and NBA by Stefanrsb
[June 02, 2025, 02:31:29 am]


Re: Count to 1,000,000. by Stefanrsb
[June 02, 2025, 02:15:04 am]


Re: Stopping by by Traser
[June 01, 2025, 10:23:13 pm]


Re: Stopping by by Old Catzu
[May 18, 2025, 07:27:06 pm]

* Who's Online

  • Dot Guests: 340
  • Dot Hidden: 0
  • Dot Users: 0

There aren't any users online.

* Birthday Calender

July 2025
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 [18] 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31

••• The Vanist Family •••

Anikia12345 · 1962

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Anikia12345Topic starter

  • User
  • *
    • Posts: 20
    With us since: 21/06/2013
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Welcome to Vanist Family


[/re author=Anikia12345 link=topic=98153.msg1569392#msg1569392 date=1372085970]
Australian bushranger Ned Kelly had been executed only twenty-six years before The Story of the Kelly Gang was made and Ned's mother Ellen and younger brother Jim were still alive at the time it was released. Historian Ian Jones suggests the story still had an "indefinable appeal" for Australians in the early twentieth century.[9] The film was made by Charles Tait and Nevin Tait, Millard Johnson and William Gibson, pioneering exhibitors. Johnson and Gibson also had experience developing film stock. Much of the film was shot on the Chartersville estate at Heidelberg, now a suburb of Melbourne.[10] In later years, William Gibson claimed that while touring through New Zealand showing the bio-pic "Living London", he noticed the large audiences attracted to Charles McMahon's stage play The Kelly Gang. Film historian Eric Reade claims the Taits themselves owned the stage rights to a Kelly play,[11] while actors Sam Crewe and John Forde later also claimed to have thought of the idea of a making a film of the Kelly Gang's exploits, inspired by the success of stage plays. A second variation of the story claims that the rights to a popular Kelly play were purchased from E.J.Cole's Bohemian Company, and members of the troup performed in the film. Tait's wife Elizabeth and their children and brothers are thought to have also taken part.[7] The film, which cost £1,000, was extremely successful, and was said to have returned at least £25,000 to its producers.
Other scenes in the film were shot in the suburbs of St Kilda (indoor scenes), and possibly Eltham, Greensborough, Mitcham, and Rosanna.[12] At the end of the twentieth century, only about 10 minutes were known to have survived.[13] In November 2006, the National Film and Sound Archive released a new digital restoration which incorporated 11 minutes of material newly discovered in the United Kingdom. The restoration now is 17 minutes long and includes the key scene of Kelly's last stand. However, a copy of the programme booklet has also survived, containing both extracts from contemporary newspaper reports of the capture of the gang, and a synopsis of the film, in six 'scenes'. The latter provided audiences with the sort of information later provided by intertitles, and can help historians imagine what the film may have been like.
Plot[edit]

Film Historian Ina Bertrand suggests that the tone of The Story of the Kelly Gang' is "one of sorrow, depicting Ned Kelly and his gang as the Last of the Bushrangers." Bertrand identifies several scenes that suggest "considerable sophistication" as filmmakers on the part of the Taits. One is the composition of a scene of police shooting parrots in the bush. The second is the capture of Ned, shot from the viewpoint of the police, as he advances.[14]
According to the synopsis given in the surviving program, the film originally comprised six sequences.These provided a loose narrative based on the Kelly gang story.
Scene 1: Police discuss a warrant for Dan Kelly’s arrest. Later, Kate Kelly rebuffs the attentions of a Trooper.
Scene 2: The killings of Kennedy, Scanlon and Lonigan at Stringybark Creek by the gang.
Scene 3: The hold-up at Younghusband’s station and a bank hold–up.
Scene 4: Various gang members and supporters evade the police and the gang killing of Aaron Sherritt.
Scene 5: The attempt to derail a train and scenes at the Glenrowan Inn. The police surround the hotel, Dan Kelly and Steve Hart “die by each other’s hands” after Joe Byrne is shot dead.
Scene 6: The closing scenes. "Ned Kelly fights hard” but is shot in the legs.“He begs the Troopers to spare his life, thus falls the last of the Kelly Gang…” [15]
Some confusion regarding the plot has emerged as a result of a variant poster from the film dating from 1910. Its similar (but different) photos suggest that either the film was being added to, or altered, or an entirely new version was made by Johnson and Gibson, as the poster proclaims. Fragments of another version of the story, “the Perth fragment,” shows Aaron Sherritt being shot outside, in front of an obviously painted canvas flat. This now appears to be from a different film altogether, perhaps a cheap imitation by a theatrical company, keen to cash in on the success of the original.[7]
Cast[edit]



Still image of film.
There is considerable uncertainty over who appeared in the film. According to the Australian film and Sound Archive, the only actors positively identified are;
John Forde as Dan Kelly
Elizabeth Tait as the stunt double for the actress playing Kate Kelly[16]
Others thought to be in the film include
Frank Mills as Ned Kelly
John and Frank Tait, Harriet Tait, members of Charles Tait's family.[10]
In her memoirs, Viola Tait claimed the part of Ned was played by a Canadian stunt actor, who deserted the project part way through.[10]
Screenings[edit]



Still image of film
The first showing was in Melbourne at the Athenaeum Hall on 26 December 1906 to much controversy. Many groups at the time, including some politicians and the police interpreted the film as glorifying criminals and in Benalla and Wangaratta the film was banned in 1907, and then again in Victoria in 1912. The film toured Australia for over 20 years and was also shown in New Zealand and Britain. The backers and exhibitors made "a fortune" from the film, perhaps in excess of £25,000.[12]
Notes[edit]

One of the gang's actual suits (probably Joe Byrnes') was supposedly used in the film.
The trains shown in the film were filmed with permission from the Victorian Railways Commission.
In 1906, the producers claimed authenticity, but apologised to the public for dressing the police in uniforms which they would not have worn while out in the bush. This was explained as necessary to enable the audience to distinguish between the outlaws and the police, in a time before colour film and when close-ups (allowing distinctions among characters) were rare.[10]
Other Ned Kelly films[edit]

The Kelly Gang (1920)
When the Kellys Were Out (1923)
When the Kellys Rode (1934)
A Message to Kelly (1947)
The Glenrowan Affair (1951)
Stringybark Massacre (1967)
Ned Kelly (1970)
Reckless Kelly (1993) (satire)
Ned Kelly (2003)
Ned (2003) (satire)
See also[edit]

Cinema of Australia
List of Australian films before 1910
List of incomplete or partially lost films
References[edit]

^ Graham Shirley and Brian Adams, Australia Cinema: The First Eighty Years, Currency Press, 1989 p 18 gives the figure at £1,000 - with this being recouped during the first week.
^ a b "THE RESEARCH BUREAU HOLDS AN AUTOPSY.". Sunday Mail (Brisbane) (Qld. : 1926 - 1954) (Brisbane) (Qld.: National Library of Australia). 17 February 1952. p. 11. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
^ Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 7.
^ ""Kelly Gang" Film Began Era Of "Feature" Pictures.". The Sunday Herald (Sydney, NSW : 1949 - 1953) (Sydney, NSW: National Library of Australia). 9 October 1949. p. 9 Supplement: Features. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
^ Ray Edmondson and Andrew Pike (1982) Australia's Lost Films. P.13. National Library of Australia, Canberra. ISBN 0-642-99251-7
^ The Argus, 27 December 1906
^ a b c Ina Bertrand and Ken Robb (1982) "The continuing saga of...The Story of the Kelly Gang." Cinema Papers, No. 36, February 1982, p.18-22
^ Chichester, Jo. "Return of the Kelly Gang". The UNESCO Courier (UNESCO) (2007 #5). ISSN 1993-8616.
^ Ian Jones (1995)Ned Kelly; A short life. Thomas C. Lothian, Melbourne. p.337. ISBN 0 85091 631 3
^ a b c d Viola Tait (1971) A Family of Brothers. The Taits and J.C.Williamson; a Theatre History. Chapter 4. Heinemann Australia. ISBN 0-85561-011-5
^ Eric Reade (1979)History and Heartburn: The Saga of Australian Film. p.5. Harper & Row, Sydney. ISBN 0-06-312033X
^ a b Eric Reade (1975) The Australian Screen. P. 28-30, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne. ISBN 0-7018-0319-3. Reade claims the film cost £400 to make
^ Hogan, David (7 February 2006). "World's first 'feature' film to be digitally restored by National Film and Sound Archive" (Press release). National Film and Sound Archive. Retrieved 09 01 2013.
^ Senses of Cinema. Ina Bertrand. Australian Contemporary Cinema, Issue 26, May 22, 2003.[1] Retrieved 10 January 2013.
^ National Film and Sound Archive
^ Sally Jackson and Graham Shirley, The Story of the Kelly Gang. National Film and Sound Archive, Australia [2]

1. Respect all Argonath RPG rules
2. Respect family and family members
3. You can't join any other gangs, clans, mafias or any other group
4. You need to follow the orders from the higher rank
5. No actions unless you get permission from the leader
6. Never Scam


Application for Wade

1.   What is your in game name?
2.   Are you active?
3.   How old are you?
4.   Which country do you live?
5.   When did you register on Argonath? (Day-Month-Year)
6.   Do you have a passport and a driving license?
7.   Do you consider yourself as a good roleplayer?
8.   What were your last names?
9.   Which  gangs ,family’s have you been in?
10.   Do you accept the rules of Wade?
11.   Do you accept the rules of Argonath?
12.   What will be your name with the _Wade tag?
13.   Tell us why you want to join Wade (at least 50 words)



Application for Vanist[/size]

1.   What is your in game name?
2.   Are you active?
3.   How old are you?
4.   Which country do you live?
5.   When did you register on Argonath? (Day-Month-Year)
6.   Do you have a passport and a driving license?
7.   Do you consider yourself as a good roleplayer?
8.   What were your last names?
9.   Which  gangs ,family’s have you been in?
10.   Do you accept the rules of Wade?
11.   Do you accept the rules of Argonath?
12.   What will be your name with the _Wade tag?
13.   Tell us why you want to join Wade (at least 50 words)
[/quote]


Boss is Anikia_Vanist



Offline Jerry_M

  • Frank Ancelotti
  • Regular
  • **
    • Posts: 317
  • Special Force Stunt
    • @Byansb
  • With us since: 11/08/2012
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
dude, make a design for your family, my eyes are bleeding

Frank Ancelotti, Sergei Ancelotti, Sergei Nikolaev, Jerry M



Offline Ritcher

  • Boss of the Scotto family.
  • Veteran
  • ***
    • Posts: 734
  • Mess With The Best, Die Like The Rest.
  • With us since: 03/11/2012
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears


Offline Hepskys

  • Regular
  • **
    • Posts: 612
  • YOLO
  • With us since: 31/10/2012
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears

Offline TonySforza

  • Anthony_Fitzpatrick
  • Veteran
  • ***
    • Posts: 640
  • Champ
  • With us since: 14/07/2007
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears

Offline Ragdoll

  • Can't touch this, nanananana nana na nanana
  • Veteran
  • ***
    • Posts: 2398
  • Meow.
  • With us since: 30/04/2010
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears

Offline Sandi

  • Pimp
  • Veteran
  • ***
    • Posts: 1473
  • Deepest voice of Argonath
  • With us since: 25/03/2013
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
  • SA:MP: Sandi Luciano
really a lot to read :O good luck



DJ vrti malo hit, malo vrti hitić, malo svira David Guetta malo Mile Kitić



Offline Xaera

  • MeAgainstTheWorld
  • Regular
  • **
    • Posts: 212
    With us since: 01/05/2013
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears

Offline Padres

  • [SA:MP] SAPD Employee
  • Regular
  • **
    • Posts: 165
    With us since: 06/09/2011
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Good Luck, suggesting you to create a own history and please make a design

[WS]Padres || WHITE SHADOW || San Andreas Police Department Employee



Offline KelviNC

  • Veteran
  • ***
    • Posts: 2391
    • @MohammadAli901
  • With us since: 07/10/2011
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
  • SA:MP: [WS]Freddy_Moralez
Good luck and please try to work on the topic,and if need any Designer just poke me I would like to help ya.



Offline Anikia12345Topic starter

  • User
  • *
    • Posts: 20
    With us since: 21/06/2013
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears
Welcome to Vanist Family


[/re author=Anikia12345 link=topic=98153.msg1569392#msg1569392 date=1372085970]
Australian bushranger Ned Kelly had been executed only twenty-six years before The Story of the Kelly Gang was made and Ned's mother Ellen and younger brother Jim were still alive at the time it was released. Historian Ian Jones suggests the story still had an "indefinable appeal" for Australians in the early twentieth century.[9] The film was made by Charles Tait and Nevin Tait, Millard Johnson and William Gibson, pioneering exhibitors. Johnson and Gibson also had experience developing film stock. Much of the film was shot on the Chartersville estate at Heidelberg, now a suburb of Melbourne.[10] In later years, William Gibson claimed that while touring through New Zealand showing the bio-pic "Living London", he noticed the large audiences attracted to Charles McMahon's stage play The Kelly Gang. Film historian Eric Reade claims the Taits themselves owned the stage rights to a Kelly play,[11] while actors Sam Crewe and John Forde later also claimed to have thought of the idea of a making a film of the Kelly Gang's exploits, inspired by the success of stage plays. A second variation of the story claims that the rights to a popular Kelly play were purchased from E.J.Cole's Bohemian Company, and members of the troup performed in the film. Tait's wife Elizabeth and their children and brothers are thought to have also taken part.[7] The film, which cost £1,000, was extremely successful, and was said to have returned at least £25,000 to its producers.
Other scenes in the film were shot in the suburbs of St Kilda (indoor scenes), and possibly Eltham, Greensborough, Mitcham, and Rosanna.[12] At the end of the twentieth century, only about 10 minutes were known to have survived.[13] In November 2006, the National Film and Sound Archive released a new digital restoration which incorporated 11 minutes of material newly discovered in the United Kingdom. The restoration now is 17 minutes long and includes the key scene of Kelly's last stand. However, a copy of the programme booklet has also survived, containing both extracts from contemporary newspaper reports of the capture of the gang, and a synopsis of the film, in six 'scenes'. The latter provided audiences with the sort of information later provided by intertitles, and can help historians imagine what the film may have been like.
Plot[edit]

Film Historian Ina Bertrand suggests that the tone of The Story of the Kelly Gang' is "one of sorrow, depicting Ned Kelly and his gang as the Last of the Bushrangers." Bertrand identifies several scenes that suggest "considerable sophistication" as filmmakers on the part of the Taits. One is the composition of a scene of police shooting parrots in the bush. The second is the capture of Ned, shot from the viewpoint of the police, as he advances.[14]
According to the synopsis given in the surviving program, the film originally comprised six sequences.These provided a loose narrative based on the Kelly gang story.
Scene 1: Police discuss a warrant for Dan Kelly’s arrest. Later, Kate Kelly rebuffs the attentions of a Trooper.
Scene 2: The killings of Kennedy, Scanlon and Lonigan at Stringybark Creek by the gang.
Scene 3: The hold-up at Younghusband’s station and a bank hold–up.
Scene 4: Various gang members and supporters evade the police and the gang killing of Aaron Sherritt.
Scene 5: The attempt to derail a train and scenes at the Glenrowan Inn. The police surround the hotel, Dan Kelly and Steve Hart “die by each other’s hands” after Joe Byrne is shot dead.
Scene 6: The closing scenes. "Ned Kelly fights hard” but is shot in the legs.“He begs the Troopers to spare his life, thus falls the last of the Kelly Gang…” [15]
Some confusion regarding the plot has emerged as a result of a variant poster from the film dating from 1910. Its similar (but different) photos suggest that either the film was being added to, or altered, or an entirely new version was made by Johnson and Gibson, as the poster proclaims. Fragments of another version of the story, “the Perth fragment,” shows Aaron Sherritt being shot outside, in front of an obviously painted canvas flat. This now appears to be from a different film altogether, perhaps a cheap imitation by a theatrical company, keen to cash in on the success of the original.[7]
Cast[edit]



Still image of film.
There is considerable uncertainty over who appeared in the film. According to the Australian film and Sound Archive, the only actors positively identified are;
John Forde as Dan Kelly
Elizabeth Tait as the stunt double for the actress playing Kate Kelly[16]
Others thought to be in the film include
Frank Mills as Ned Kelly
John and Frank Tait, Harriet Tait, members of Charles Tait's family.[10]
In her memoirs, Viola Tait claimed the part of Ned was played by a Canadian stunt actor, who deserted the project part way through.[10]
Screenings[edit]



Still image of film
The first showing was in Melbourne at the Athenaeum Hall on 26 December 1906 to much controversy. Many groups at the time, including some politicians and the police interpreted the film as glorifying criminals and in Benalla and Wangaratta the film was banned in 1907, and then again in Victoria in 1912. The film toured Australia for over 20 years and was also shown in New Zealand and Britain. The backers and exhibitors made "a fortune" from the film, perhaps in excess of £25,000.[12]
Notes[edit]

One of the gang's actual suits (probably Joe Byrnes') was supposedly used in the film.
The trains shown in the film were filmed with permission from the Victorian Railways Commission.
In 1906, the producers claimed authenticity, but apologised to the public for dressing the police in uniforms which they would not have worn while out in the bush. This was explained as necessary to enable the audience to distinguish between the outlaws and the police, in a time before colour film and when close-ups (allowing distinctions among characters) were rare.[10]
Other Ned Kelly films[edit]

The Kelly Gang (1920)
When the Kellys Were Out (1923)
When the Kellys Rode (1934)
A Message to Kelly (1947)
The Glenrowan Affair (1951)
Stringybark Massacre (1967)
Ned Kelly (1970)
Reckless Kelly (1993) (satire)
Ned Kelly (2003)
Ned (2003) (satire)
See also[edit]

Cinema of Australia
List of Australian films before 1910
List of incomplete or partially lost films
References[edit]

^ Graham Shirley and Brian Adams, Australia Cinema: The First Eighty Years, Currency Press, 1989 p 18 gives the figure at £1,000 - with this being recouped during the first week.
^ a b "THE RESEARCH BUREAU HOLDS AN AUTOPSY.". Sunday Mail (Brisbane) (Qld. : 1926 - 1954) (Brisbane) (Qld.: National Library of Australia). 17 February 1952. p. 11. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
^ Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 7.
^ ""Kelly Gang" Film Began Era Of "Feature" Pictures.". The Sunday Herald (Sydney, NSW : 1949 - 1953) (Sydney, NSW: National Library of Australia). 9 October 1949. p. 9 Supplement: Features. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
^ Ray Edmondson and Andrew Pike (1982) Australia's Lost Films. P.13. National Library of Australia, Canberra. ISBN 0-642-99251-7
^ The Argus, 27 December 1906
^ a b c Ina Bertrand and Ken Robb (1982) "The continuing saga of...The Story of the Kelly Gang." Cinema Papers, No. 36, February 1982, p.18-22
^ Chichester, Jo. "Return of the Kelly Gang". The UNESCO Courier (UNESCO) (2007 #5). ISSN 1993-8616.
^ Ian Jones (1995)Ned Kelly; A short life. Thomas C. Lothian, Melbourne. p.337. ISBN 0 85091 631 3
^ a b c d Viola Tait (1971) A Family of Brothers. The Taits and J.C.Williamson; a Theatre History. Chapter 4. Heinemann Australia. ISBN 0-85561-011-5
^ Eric Reade (1979)History and Heartburn: The Saga of Australian Film. p.5. Harper & Row, Sydney. ISBN 0-06-312033X
^ a b Eric Reade (1975) The Australian Screen. P. 28-30, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne. ISBN 0-7018-0319-3. Reade claims the film cost £400 to make
^ Hogan, David (7 February 2006). "World's first 'feature' film to be digitally restored by National Film and Sound Archive" (Press release). National Film and Sound Archive. Retrieved 09 01 2013.
^ Senses of Cinema. Ina Bertrand. Australian Contemporary Cinema, Issue 26, May 22, 2003.[1] Retrieved 10 January 2013.
^ National Film and Sound Archive
^ Sally Jackson and Graham Shirley, The Story of the Kelly Gang. National Film and Sound Archive, Australia [2]

1. Respect all Argonath RPG rules
2. Respect family and family members
3. You can't join any other gangs, clans, mafias or any other group
4. You need to follow the orders from the higher rank
5. No actions unless you get permission from the leader
6. Never Scam


Application for Wade

1.   What is your in game name?
2.   Are you active?
3.   How old are you?
4.   Which country do you live?
5.   When did you register on Argonath? (Day-Month-Year)
6.   Do you have a passport and a driving license?
7.   Do you consider yourself as a good roleplayer?
8.   What were your last names?
9.   Which  gangs ,family’s have you been in?
10.   Do you accept the rules of Wade?
11.   Do you accept the rules of Argonath?
12.   What will be your name with the _Wade tag?
13.   Tell us why you want to join Wade (at least 50 words)



Application for Vanist[/size]

1.   What is your in game name?
2.   Are you active?
3.   How old are you?
4.   Which country do you live?
5.   When did you register on Argonath? (Day-Month-Year)
6.   Do you have a passport and a driving license?
7.   Do you consider yourself as a good roleplayer?
8.   What were your last names?
9.   Which  gangs ,family’s have you been in?
10.   Do you accept the rules of Wade?
11.   Do you accept the rules of Argonath?
12.   What will be your name with the _Wade tag?
13.   Tell us why you want to join Wade (at least 50 words)



Boss is Anikia



http://
Spoiler for Hiden:
[/img]][/url][/email]][url=http://[img]http://[spoiler][/spoiler][/img]][img]http://[spoiler][/spoiler][/img][/url][/ftp][/glow]



Offline Ragdoll

  • Can't touch this, nanananana nana na nanana
  • Veteran
  • ***
    • Posts: 2398
  • Meow.
  • With us since: 30/04/2010
    YearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYearsYears

 


free
SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal