Harold D. Schuster
Harold D. Schuster | |
---|---|
Born |
Cherokee, Iowa, United States | August 1, 1902
Died |
July 19, 1986 83) Westlake Village, California, United States | (aged
Occupation |
Editor Film director Actor |
Years active | 1927 – 1966 |
Harold D. Schuster ( August 1, 1902 – July 19, 1986) was an American editor and film director.[1] In 1937 he made Wings of the Morning, the first-ever three-strip Technicolor film shot in Europe.[2]
While the majority of Schuster's directorial output can be considered routine, there are two acknowledged gems among them. His 1954 film noir thriller Loophole is a fast-paced, well-acted drama about a bank teller framed for a $50,000 embezzlement and his efforts to clear his name, and his 1957 Dragoon Wells Massacre is, despite its potboiler title, an actionful, tightly made western with some surprising plot twists in which many of the characters aren't quite what they seem to be.
Selected filmography
- Women Everywhere (1930)
- Wings of the Morning (1937)
- Dinner at the Ritz (1937)
- Zanzibar (1940)
- Diamond Frontier (1940)
- On the Sunny Side (1942)
- Bomber's Moon (co-director credited as "Charles Fuhr"; 1943)
- My Friend Flicka (1943)
- The Tender Years (1948)
- Kid Monk Baroni (1952)
- Loophole (1954)
- Finger Man (1955)
- Dragoon Wells Massacre (1957)
- Portland Exposé (1957)
- Courage of Black Beauty (1958)
References
External links
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