Anne Haddy Trailers
Dot and the Bunny TrailerA Christmas Carol TrailerAround the World with Dot Trailer
Dot and the Bunny TrailerA Christmas Carol TrailerAround the World with Dot Trailer
Total trailers found: 12
16 July 1976
The poignant struggle of a man to grant his terminally ill son three wishes - and the obstacles cast in his way of achieving this goal.
20 December 1979
In old New South Wales a new bunch of convicts arrives including the little convict, young Toby Nelson.
30 October 1978
Torn by the conflict between society and her own life, as well as her failing marriage and love for another woman, Cass desperately tried to pull together the pieces of her shattered life.
18 May 1977
Concert promoter Nick Loomis is sent to Sydney by his ex father-in-law and boss Garth Kingswood, and asked to deliver a briefcase to a foreigner.
18 August 1966
An Italian sports journalist arrives in Australia but finds no work. The only employment he can find is as a builder's labourer.
05 February 1964
A German professor un-nerves the residents when he claims to have been in a small Yorkshire moors inn sometime previously.
31 July 1982
Miser Ebenezer Scrooge is awakened on Christmas Eve by spirits who reveal to him his own miserable existence, what opportunities he wasted in his youth, his current cruelties, and the dire fate that awaits him if he does not change his ways.
03 April 1983
Dot ventures out into the bush determined to finally locate the little lost joey and reunite him with his mother.
04 December 1981
In this magical film Dot joins up with Santa Claus in order to help her friend the mother kangaroo find her lost baby.
14 May 1977
An Australian girl gets lost in the Outback, but she's befriended by a kangaroo who gives her a ride in her pouch as they search for the girl's home.
20 April 1977
Unmarried, beautiful and talented, Melanie Hilton discovers she is pregnant. The editor of a woman's magazine, she decides to have her baby and take leave from her job.
01 July 1971
Where Dead Men Lie is a short drama based on a "script" written by Henry Lawson in 1896 in the earliest days of moving pictures.