Yahoo Web Search

  1. Boris Ingster

    American film director

Search results

  1. Boris Ingster was a Russian-American screenwriter, film and television director, and producer (October 29, 1903, in Riga, then in the Russian Empire – August 2, 1978, in Los Angeles, California) notable for his role in launching the film noir genre. In the 1930s he was a screenwriter on several films. He made his directorial debut in 1940 ...

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0409069Boris Ingster - IMDb

    Boris Ingster. Ingster was born in 1903 in Riga of what is now Latvia. He worked with Sergei Eisenstein in Russia before arriving in the United States in 1930. In the 1930's, he worked as a writer for several movies, among them The Story of Alexander Graham Bell. His directorial debut was in the 1940 classic "Stranger on the Third Floor," in ...

    • Producer, Writer, Additional Crew
    • October 29, 1903
    • Boris Ingster
    • August 2, 1978
  3. Dec 24, 2021 · Images. An illustration of a heart shape Donate An illustration of text ellipses. ... 1950-southside-1-1000-linea-secreta-boris-ingster-vose Scanner Internet Archive ...

    • 79 min
  4. Apr 26, 2023 · It becomes evident when you see how Ingster and his editor Harry Marker weave the expressionistic images of Mike’s psyche together. Or how Ingster ties Polglase’s expressionist production designs with Musuraca’s surrealistic camera, while Roy Webb’s anxious score plays over it all, is impressive for any director, much less a first-timer.

  5. Southside 1-1000 is a 1950 semidocumentary-style film noir directed by Boris Ingster featuring Don DeFore, Andrea King, George Tobias and Gerald Mohr as the off-screen narrator. Based on a true story, it is about a Secret Service agent (DeFore) who goes undercover and moves into a hotel run by a beautiful female manager (King), so that he can ...

    • November 12, 1950 (United States)
  6. Find the perfect boris ingster stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Available for both RF and RM licensing.

  7. Blind Alley. Directed by Charles Vidor. Screening on Film. Stranger on the Third Floor. Directed by Boris Ingster. With Peter Lorre, John McGuire, Margaret Tallichet. US, 1940, 35mm, black & white, 64 min. Print source: British Film Institute. Shadows come cheap, so low-budget movies can afford to use them lavishly.