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Sons of Matthew Poster

Sons of Matthew

1949 | 107m | English

(98 votes)

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Popularity: 0.2 (history)

Details

The story of five brothers who homestead, with other settlers, on the virgin plateaus of the Australian bush country.
Release Date: Dec 16, 1949
Director: Charles Chauvel
Writer: Maxwell Dunn, Bernard O'Reilly, Charles Chauvel, Elsa Chauvel
Genres:
Keywords settler, homesteader, bush country
Production Companies Universal International Pictures, Greater Union Theatres
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 19, 2026
Entered: Apr 30, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Michael Pate Shane O'Riordan
Ken Wayne Barney O'Riordan
Tommy Burns Luke O'Riordan
John Unicomb Terry O'Riordan
John Ewart Mickey O'Riordan
Wendy Gibb Cathy McAllister
Name Job
Maxwell Dunn Screenplay
Bernard O'Reilly Novel
Terry Banks Editor
Carl Kayser Cinematography
Bert Nicholas Cinematography
George Hurst Production Design
Henry Krips Music
Alec Kellaway Assistant Director
Charles Chauvel Screenplay, Director
Elsa Chauvel Screenplay
Name Title
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

If you thought there were a lot of the “Waltons” then just wait til you meet the pioneering “O’Riordan” clan who are bent on carving themselves an home in the newly colonised Australia. It’s dad Matthew (John O’Malley) and wife “Jane” (Thelma Scott) who arrive with little but the clothes they stand ... up in, and over a generation raise five boys and two girls and make a go of their farm. Along the way, a neighbouring bush fire rendered the young “Cathy” (Wendy Gibb) orphaned, and so they have adopted her and she has become the firm favourite of “Barney” (Ken Wayne). Faced with the pretty exponential increase in the family, they decide that they have to branch out and with the government offering almost 500 acres per man to people who will take some risks, they pull their resources and set off into the hitherto untouched territory to establish farms of their own. Meantime, the strong, silent, brother “Shane” (Michael Pate) has also developed a bit of an interest in “Cathy” and so teed up a bit of a conflict with his sibling as she now seems to prefer him instead. With all these romantic shenanigans going on, the family also have to fight the brutal elements to prosper with something akin to a jungle having to be tamed; with trails to be blazed and cattle reared. It all comes to an head when the mother of all storms hits their farmstead and with the rain and the wind causing havoc, the brothers and “Cathy” must have their reckoning. The story itself, and the acting, isn’t especially notable but as the film gathers pace it really does illustrate just how tough it was for these families to set up homes amidst the unwelcoming and unforgiving wilderness. The location photography, especially towards the end, works quite well at demonstrating these difficulties whilst the writing allows us to follow quite a likeable family as they persevere through triumph and disaster with a typical mix of Anglo-Irish stoicism and opportunism along the way. I think this compares fine with many of it’s Hollywood counterparts, and I quite enjoyed it.

Mar 27, 2025