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Robert and Siodmak
Directors such as Fritz Lang, Robert Siodmak, and Michael Curtiz brought a dramatically shadowed lighting style and a psychologically expressive approach to visual composition, or mise-en-scène, with them to Hollywood, where they would make some of the most famous of classic noirs.
Perhaps no director better displayed that spirit than the German-born Robert Siodmak, who had already made a score of films before his 1940 arrival in Hollywood.
Justinian was portrayed by Orson Welles in the 1968 German film Kampf um Rom I, directed by Robert Siodmak.
Robert Siodmak ( 8 August 1900 – 10 March 1973 ) was a German born American film director.
Robert Siodmak was considered an actor's director, discovering Burt Lancaster and skillfully directing actresses such as Ava Gardner, Olivia de Havilland, Dorothy McGuire, Yvonne de Carlo, Barbara Stanwyck and Ella Raines.
* Literature on Robert Siodmak
* The File on Robert Siodmak in Hollywood: 1941-1951
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* People on Sunday, Robert Siodmak, 1930
* March 10 – Robert Siodmak, German-American director ( b. 1900 )
Laughton played a henpecked husband who eventually murders his wife in The Suspect ( 1944 ), directed by Robert Siodmak, who would become a good friend.
He worked in Germany with several other beginners ( Billy Wilder and Robert Siodmak also worked with him on the 1929 feature People on Sunday ) before going to America to study film.
Chaney had run-ins with actor Frank Reicher ( whom he nearly strangled on camera in The Mummy's Ghost ) and director Robert Siodmak ( over whose head Chaney broke a vase ).

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