James Condon

Most Popular James Condon Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

The Power Makers Trailer (1957)

01 January 1957

A working day at the open cut coal mine and power station at Yallourn, Victoria, as experienced by four employees.

Rubbish Trailer (1982)

01 January 1982

A young boy creates a world of puppet friends using pieces of rubbish found in the street.

Scobie Malone Trailer (1975)

03 October 1975

Sydney homicide detective Sergeant Scobie Malone and his offsider investigate the murder of Helga, whose corpse is found in the basement of the Sydney Opera House.

The Three Musketeers Trailer (1973)

23 November 1973

"The Three Musketeers" is 1973 animated TV movie from Hanna Barbera that is a remake of their own 1968 cartoon of the same name.

Tim Trailer (1979)

13 July 1979

Handsome but backward gardener Tim Melville has a new woman in his life. She is Mary, his widowed employer, a woman who had given up on love until she had found Tim.

Cass Trailer (1978)

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.

Barnaby and Me Trailer (1977)

08 August 1977

Barnaby and Me is a 1978 Australian TV movie about a girl and her talking koala who are pursued by criminals.

Evil Angels Trailer (1988)

03 November 1988

Based on the true story of Lindy Chamberlain who, during a family camping trip to Ayers Rock in central Australia, claimed she witnessed a dingo take her baby daughter, Azaria, from their tent.

Bony Trailer (1990)

05 September 1990

Bony, a great-great-grandson of legendary part-Aboriginal detective Napoleon Bonaparte. Albert Harris had been a teenager when he knew Napolean; decades later, as a tribal elder, he had tracked and rescued Napoleon's descendant from the desert, after Bony's parents had tragically perished.

Silent Night, Holy Night Trailer (1976)

01 December 1976

Tells the story of how the famous Christmas carol Silent Night was written.