A. W. Hackel, born Aaron William Hackel (December 18, 1882 – October 22, 1959), was an American film producer who founded Supreme Pictures in 1934.
A. W. Hackel | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | October 22, 1959 Los Angeles | (aged 76)
Other names | A. William Hackel |
Biography
editHackel was born in Ulanów, Nisko County, Podkarpackie Voivodeship, Poland.[1]
In 1934, Hackel formed Supreme Pictures, at which he contracted Bob Steele for 32 of his Westerns,[2] such as Alias John Law (1935). Hackel also produced 16 Westerns with Johnny Mack Brown.
In 1936, Republic Pictures needed more Westerns and struck a deal with Hackel, who released his films through Republic.[3] After the demise of Supreme Pictures in 1942, Hackel released his films through Monogram Pictures. All of his films were Westerns until Am I Guilty? (1940), a race film. He followed that film with numerous crime dramas, including The Flaming Urge (1953).
Partial filmography
edit- The Brand of Hate (1934)
- Alias John Law (1935)
- Trail of Terror (1935)
- Between Men (1935)
- The Courageous Avenger (1935)
- Branded a Coward (1935)
- The Kid Ranger (1936)
- Everyman's Law (1936)
- Rogue of the Range (1936)
- The Law Rides (1936)
- The Gun Ranger (1936)
- Doomed at Sundown (1937)
- The Gambling Terror (1937)
- Desert Patrol (1938)
- Am I Guilty? (1940)
- Murder by Invitation (1941)
- Phantom Killer (1942)
- The Living Ghost (1942)
- A Gentle Gangster (1943)
- Shadow of Suspicion (1944)
- The Flaming Urge (1953)
Notes
edit- ^ "Aaron William Hackel". December 22, 1881.
- ^ Supreme Pictures Corporation Archived July 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Bob Steele
External links
edit- A.W. Hackel at IMDb