Albert Leroy Rule (born 27 July 1886 Hastings, Michigan; died 10 August 1943 Chicago) was a producer and director of two World War I documentaries.[1] Rule had served as a private in the American Expeditionary Forces of World War I and received a discharge in 1920.[2] Rule adopted a nickname title of "Colonel" while in the movie business.

Filmography

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  • The Big Drive, (premier: December 14, 1932, McVickers Theater, Chicago), directed by Albert L. Rule, distributed by RKO
  • When Germany Surrendered, originally released as The Death Parade (premier: 1934, Danville, Illinois, re-released 1939), produced, directed, and narrated by Albert L. Rule, distributed by RKO[3][4][5] OCLC 423401148
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References

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General references

Inline citations

  1. '^ Ineffective Methods, The Times-Picayune, col. 2, pg. 8, January 28, 1939
  2. ^ W. Ward Marsh (1893-1971), One Moment, Please, The Plain Dealer, pps. 9 & 13, January 22, 1933
  3. ^ The Exhibitor, pg. 21, May 15, 1934
  4. ^ Motion Picture Herald, pg. 37, February 3, 1934
  5. ^ The Hollywood Reporter, pg. 3, September 1939