[1] It produced eight feature films in total, all directed by Mervale, who used a stock company of actors including Lovely (then known as Louise Carbasse), Jerome Partick, Godfrey Cass and Harry Beaumont.
Movies were shot at Biograph's glass-roofed studio in Manly, New South Wales.
In the words of film historians Graham Shirley and Brian Adams "the subjects chosen were predominantly colonial, with no less than six featuring prison themes, usually with an innocent man receiving a pardon or making his escape.
[3] At one stage the company was earning over £300 a week and employing six lecturers to accompany the films.
However they had trouble finding a market for their work and the company later wound up and merged into Universal Films Ltd in 1912.