| The Crime and the Criminal | |
|---|---|
| 18 February 1912 issue of Sunday Times | |
| Directed by | Alfred Rolfe |
| Starring | Charles Villiers |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 3,000 feet [3] |
| Country | Australia |
| Languages | Silent film English intertitles |
The Crime and the Criminal is a 1912 Australian silent film directed by Alfred Rolfe. It features the same railway collision as the climax in Do Men Love Women? (1912) which had come out only a few weeks prior. However the plots of the movies are different. [4] [5]
The film was set in Sydney and the Kimberley. [6]
According to the Sydney Truth the film "deals with an intensely thrilling story, pictured with true melodramatic emphasis. Local coloring is faithfully introduced, and % big sensation is provided in a realistic railway smash. The jealous hatred of the unscrupulous criminal for bis successful brother provides a strong plot." [8]
The film debuted at the Alhambra Theatre in Sydney on 19 February. That theatre had just shown A Daughter of Australia. [9]
The Sun said "the subject and plot are well constructed: : It should command the attention of picture lovers." [10]
The Bulletin said the film "pulls the public leg to excess, and drags the long arm of coincidence out of joint and all reason." [11]