Tasmania the Wonderland (1935) | 4K Restoration
Jun 20, 2025•Channel
AI Analysis
Data from YouTube Data API v3•Updated Just now
Video Overview
Video Details
PublishedJun 20, 2025
Duration9:34
Video IDhFj8Op5XpiU
Languageen
CategoryFilm & Animation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views45K
Likes732
Comments28
Engagement Rate1.69%
Likes per 100 views1.63
Comments per 1K views0.62
Video Tags
#tasmania#australia#history#tourism#film#4k#national film and sound archive#thylacine#tasmania 4k#tasmania the wonderland#tasmania 1940s#tasmania vintage#tasmania history#tasmanian tourism#australian travel 1940s#4k australian archive#nfsa 4k#historic tasmania 4k#vintage australia 4k#restored australian film
Description
Tasmania is calling! This travelogue, thought to be part of a longer film produced for cinemas in 1935, is pitched at tourists but often takes a more formal, educational tone. To the accompaniment of chirpy newsreel strings, we’re shown the attractions of Hobart and its surrounds: cruising the unspoilt Derwent River, trundling along in double-decker trams, sailing on the harbour and playing on Sandy Beach.
There’s an element of parochial pride in the narration, which extols Hobart’s harbour as one of the five best in the world, lingers on the IXL factory with its annual production of 13 million tins, and sings the praises of Tasmanian apples, ‘which might grace even the table of the Royal house.’ That touch of Anglophilia is echoed in the descriptions of the Derwent valley, with its crops of fruit and hops, as reminiscent of ‘old England’.
This may be quaint in the context of orchards, but takes on a more sinister note in a visit to Hobart’s Beaumaris Zoo, where a Tasmanian devil on a leash is chivvied while the narrator accuses it of being ‘spiteful and cunning’. Harder still to watch is the footage of the last surviving thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) in captivity, pacing its small, barren cage. It’s a reminder of the care that must be taken to preserve and protect what makes Tasmania wonderful. Since 1996, Threatened Species Day has been held in Australia on 7 September, the day this thylacine died.
Tasmania the Wonderful, although it seems to be incomplete, remains a detailed and valuable record of Hobart in the 1930s.
Discover more incredible archival footage from Tasmania at the NFSA: https://www.nfsa.gov.au/
NFSA ID: 55567
For reuse and licensing enquiries, please contact: [email protected]
#TasmaniaHistory #AustralianHistory #1930sAustralia #VintageTasmania #TasmanianTiger #Thylacine #NFSA #4K Restoration #AustraliaIn4K #ArchivalFootage #TravelDocumentary