A Girl of the Bush

A Girl of the Bush is a 1921 Australian silent film directed by Franklyn Barrett.

Lorna Denver manages Kangaroo Flat sheep station and is pursued by two men, evil Oswald and handsome young surveyor, Tom Wilson.

A Chinese cook reveals that the real killer was the father of a woman who had been seduced by Oswald.

[5] Filming was conducted both on studio sets and on location and the plot is interwoven with lengthy documentary-style passages that depict then-contemporary rural Australian activities such as sheep sheering and dipping, wool packing and transportation by horse team, cattle branding, and horse-breaking in the outback, as well as the playing of the illegal gambling game two up in the back alleys of Sydney.

[3] Vera James' father bought the rights to distribute the film in New Zealand.