Talk:Samuel Fuller
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Fair use rationale for Image:Fuller.jpg
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Autobiography
editFuller's autobio, published some years after his death is amazing. The salient factor of his life is his early start. Because he was working in newspapers in the 1920s while still a teenager, he might have been in 1997 one of the last living people to have worked with Arthur Brisbane, through whom he met William Randolph Hearst, etc.
That a friend of Gene Fowler, a man I associate with pre-WWII characters, even roaring twenties people like Walker, was still around then is also amazing; I wish I had met Samuel FullerJrm2007 (talk) 07:06, 21 June 2008 (UTC)
Order of material
editIsn't the material on the film White Dog in the wrong place, and a bit diffuse?Sayerslle (talk) 02:39, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
- Do you think it should be split between his biographical section and the career section? I've done that to give it a try. What do you mean by diffuse? -- AnmaFinotera (talk · contribs) 02:43, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
I think you've put the 'White Dog' material in the right place now. The article reads better now. By diffuse I just meant it seemed a bit over detailed.Sayerslle (talk) 00:50, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
Filmography
editI removed Dead Pigeon on Beethoven Street, because it was an episode of a German cop show, and not a film. The page for that episode has a link to the Internet Movie Database, which shows that it is part of the German cop show, Tatort.bruvensky (talk) 20:20, 4 July 2013 (UTC)
- It also isn't that good, really. Too much of a comic strip (perhaps a response to Mr. Freedom by William Klein? Just a wild guess). Forty years ago, I read a lot about Fuller, but of course haven't kept up, so a lot of stuff in this article was new to me. Great work.
Novels
edit- Sappho's Flucht, a german pb original thriller was published 1982 (or 1986?) by Ullstein.--Ralfdetlef (talk) 19:45, 13 December 2023 (UTC)
Critical Studies
edit- David Will & Peter Wollen, eds.: "Samuel Fuller", Edinburgh Film Festival, 1972, 182 p. Essays by Jean- Luc Godard, Raymond Durgnat, Thomas Elsaesser, Peter Wollen, amongst others. Samuel Fuller Interview.
- Nicholas Garnham: Samuel Fuller, 1972. Cinema One Studies; The Viking Press, N.Y.
- Phil Hardy: Sam Fuller, 1970. Studio Vista/Praeger Film Library (Ian Cameron, editor)
External links modified
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Born Michal Filler; born in Russia, in 1911; birthdate 1912 and birthplace wrong
editI've just read on Jonathan Rosenbaum's blog, in an re-issue of his April 2017 Sight and Sound review of Marsha Gordon's Oxford U. P. monograph: ''Film Is Like a Battleground'', that (M. Gordon found out) Fuller was NOT born in 1912, but sometimes, somewhere in 1911. He came, named Michal Filler, to the USA on the S. S. Canada, from Wladimir, Russia in 1913 aged 1 and a half years old.--Ralfdetlef (talk) 10:52, 17 December 2023 (UTC)