This book discusses the life and career of German Jewish filmmaker Ewald Andre Dupont (1861-1956), as a journalist, screen writer, and director in Berlin, 1913-25, 1931-33, a director at British International Pictures, 1926-31, and a B-movie director in Hollywood, 1925-26, 1933-56. Having apprenticed with Alfred Hitchcock, F. W. Murnau, Ernst Lubitsch, and Fritz Lang in Berlin, where he distinguished himself with Das alte Gesetz (1923) and Variete (1925), Dupont launched his career at 'the British Hollywood' of British International Pictures, where he contributed to the studio's international style, experimented with emergent sound technologies, made the world's first multilingual sound pictures, and, in the most creative phase of his career, directed the feature films Moulin Rouge (1928), Piccadilly (1929), Atlantic (1930), Two Worlds (1931), and Cape Forlorn (1931), which along with Variete, provide the focus of this academic study.
About the AuthorPaul Matthew St. Pierre is associate professor of English at Simon Fraser University.
ReviewsSt. Pierre (English, Simon Fraser U., British Columbia) recounts the life and career of German filmmaker Dupont (1891-1956), emphasizing the impact on British film of his work in Germany, Hollywood, and Britain. Stringing the biography from movie to move, he discusses such topics as /> as a precursor of his British Expressionism; , Anna May Wong, and the expressive blue light; , the pogrom, and Dupont's Jewish subjectivity; and the lighthouse invited the female antihero in . * Book News, Inc. *
Book InformationISBN 9781611474336
Author Paul Matthew St. PierreFormat Hardback
Page Count 222
Imprint Fairleigh Dickinson University PressPublisher Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Weight(grams) 531g
Dimensions(mm) 247mm * 167mm * 19mm