A train pulls into a suburban train station. Men and women get off and begin walking away.
It's a film by Henry Walter Barnett . He was a portrait photographer who decided to get in on this new-fangled motion picture stuff, clearly the next big thing in his line of work. Clearly that didn't work out; the next year he pulled up stakes and moved to London, where his portrait work was as successful as it had been in Australia. He died in 1934, aged 71.
THe title of the film will make you think of the Lumiere's movie. Clearly this imitation was intended to replicate that, with an Australian setting. If it worked for the downtown shots, it could work for this. Indeed, a couple of dozen "Arrival of a train" films woud be produced over the next ten years, to gradually fade out of consciousnesss.... except for the first one.