R. Maslyn Williams

R. Maslyn Williams Trailers

New Guinea Patrol Trailer

Most Popular R. Maslyn Williams Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Along the Sepik Trailer (1964)

01 January 1964

Set on the Upper Sepik River in New Guinea, this film records the day-to-day experiences of Kiap (one-man representative of the Australian government in regional areas) Barry Downes as he patrols an area that in 1963 had only recently been brought under control from headhunters.

Music Camp Trailer (1949)

19 July 1949

This year the Musica Viva Festival will feature content from the NFSA's Film Australia Collection to be screened in the Bang & Olufsen Salon throughout the festival in Sydney.

National Capital Trailer (1945)

10 December 1945

Produced by The National Film Board 1945. Directed by Maslyn Williams. When this film was made, Canberra was one of the world's youngest planned cities.

Mountain Spring: The Flinders Range Trailer (1956)

01 January 1956

Progress in South Australia manifests itself around the Flinders Range country in the industries of Whyalla, Port Pirie, Port Augusta, Leigh Creek and Aroona Dam.

The Happy Island Trailer (1958)

10 March 1958

The Happy Island looks at the work of the London Missionary Society on Gemo (now Hanudamua) Island in Port Moresby harbour, Papua New Guinea, which from 1937-1974 treated people who suffered from infectious diseases, mainly leprosy and tuberculosis.

New Guinea Patrol Trailer (1958)

01 January 1958

New Guinea Patrol is a 1958 Australian documentary film produced by R. Maslyn Williams.

The Karri Forest Trailer (1962)

01 January 1962

Pemberton Forest, a karri forest in the southwest region of Western Australia, is the site of a youth camp for school children.

Goldtown Trailer (1949)

19 July 1949

Much of the romance associated with the development of the gold industry is to be found at Kalgoorlie on the golden mile, that rich strip of Western Australian territory.

Mike and Stefani Trailer (1955)

02 January 1955

A Ukrainian couple become refugees during and after World War Two, and they end up as Displaced Persons (DPs) in a camp in Germany, before they are eventually accepted for resettlement in Australia.