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Edgar Georg Ulmer (September 17, 1904 – September 30, 1972) was an Austrian-American film director. He is best remembered for the movies The Black Cat (1934) and Detour (1945). These stylish and eccentric works have achieved cult status, whereas Ulmer's other films remain relatively unknown.
The first feature he directed in North America, Damaged Lives (1933), was a low-budget exploitation film exposing the horrors of venereal disease. His next film, The Black Cat (1934), starring Béla Lugosi and Boris Karloff, was made for a major studio, Universal Pictures. Demonstrating the striking visual style that would be Ulmer's hallmark, the film was Universal's biggest hit of the season. Ulmer, however, had begun an affair with Shirley Beatrice Kassler, who had been married since 1933 to independent producer Max Alexander, nephew of Universal studio head Carl Laemmle. Kassler's divorce in 1936 and her marriage to Ulmer later the same year led to his being exiled from the major Hollywood studios. Ulmer was relegated to making B movies at Poverty Row production houses. His wife, now Shirley Ulmer, acted as script supervisor on nearly all of these films, and she wrote the screenplays for several. Their daughter, Arianne, appeared as an extra in several of his films.
Consigned to the fringes of the U.S. motion picture industry, Ulmer specialized first in "ethnic films," notably in Ukrainian—Natalka Poltavka (1937), Cossacks in Exile (1939)—and Yiddish—The Light Ahead (1939), Americaner Shadchen (1940). The best-known of these ethnic films is the Yiddish Green Fields (1937), co-directed with Jacob Ben-Ami. Ulmer eventually found a niche making melodramas on tiny budgets and with often unpromising scripts and actors for Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC), with Ulmer describing himself as "the Frank Capra of PRC". His PRC thriller Detour (1945) has won considerable acclaim as a prime example of low-budget film noir, and it was selected by the Library of Congress among the first group of 100 American films worthy of special preservation efforts. In 1947, Ulmer made Carnegie Hall with the help of conductor Fritz Reiner, godfather of the Ulmers' daughter, Arianné. The film features performances by many leading figures in classical music, including Reiner, Jascha Heifetz, Artur Rubinstein, Gregor Piatigorsky and Lily Pons. Ulmer did get a chance to direct two films with substantial budgets, The Strange Woman (1946) and Ruthless (1948). The former, featuring a strong performance by Hedy Lamarr, is regarded by critics as one of Ulmer's best. In 1951 he directed a low-budget science-fiction film with a noirish tone, The Man from Planet X. In 1964 he directed his last film, The Cavern, in Italy. Description above from the Wikipedia article Edgar G. Ulmer, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Directing
120
Male
1904-09-17
Olmütz, Moravia, Austria-Hungary [now Olomouc, Czech Republic]
John Warner, Edgar George Ulmer, Edgar Georg Ulmer, Ove H. Sehested
People on Sunday
Journey Beneath the Desert
Detour
Let My People Live
The Amazing Transparent Man
The Black Cat
Tomorrow We Live
The Strange Woman
Strange Illusion
Murder Is My Beat
Bluebeard
Beyond the Time Barrier
Ruthless
The Man from Planet X
Club Havana
Damaged Lives
Carnegie Hall
Jive Junction
The Cavern
The Naked Dawn
Girls in Chains
The Naked Venus
Her Sister's Secret
Daughter of Dr. Jekyll
Isle of Forgotten Sins
Green Fields
Moon Over Harlem
Babes in Bagdad
My Son, The Hero
The Pirates of Capri
Hannibal
Thunder Over Texas
Cossacks in Exile
The Light Ahead
St. Benny the Dip
American Matchmaker
Goodbye, Mr. Germ
The Perjured Farmer
The Wife of Monte Cristo
They Do Come Back
Cloud in the Sky
Diagnostic Procedures in Tuberculosis
The Singing Blacksmith
Natalka Poltavka
From Nine to Nine
Another to Conquer
Hitler's Madman
Swiss Family Robinson: Lost in the Jungle
Loves of Three Queens
Turbosupercharger: Flight Operation
The Turbosupercharger - Master of the sky
The Fate of Two Queens
Minstrel Man
So Young, So Bad
We Live Again