Highlighted works
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Among the most famous of broken films, Orson Welles’ masterful follow-up to Citizen Kane was taken out of his control and re-edited by the studio.
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Novelist John Steinbeck’s great chronicle of Depression-era America reached the screen in director John Ford’s stark and powerful adaptation.
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Given extraordinary freedom by Hollywood studio RKO for his debut film, boy wonder Welles created a modernist masterpiece that is regularly voted the best film ever made.
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Undervalued on its initial release, this small-town drama has become a Christmas favourite, though its tearful affirmation is laced with darker emotions.
Filmography
1949
Dreamland bartender
1949
[conductor]
1949
[detective]
1947
[police sergeant] (uncredited)
1947
[port steward/policeman/Peters]
1947
[porter]
1947
[.]
1946
[New York policeman]
1946
[Allen]
1946
[policeman]
1945
marshal
1944
[Ed Nolan]
1942
[cop in courtroom]
1942
[policeman]
1941
politician (uncredited)
1940
[policeman] (uncredited)
1940
[guard]
1939
[policeman]
1939
[policeman]
1937
Sullivan
1937
[teamster]
1937
[guard]
1937
[Bart, express driver]
1936
[policeman]
1934
[second process server]