Robert L. Lippert Explained
Robert L. Lippert |
Birth Date: | March 31, 1909 |
Birth Place: | Alameda, California, United States |
Death Place: | Oakland, California, United States |
Occupation: | Film producer, cinema chain owner |
Robert Lenard Lippert (March 31, 1909 – November 16, 1976) was an American film producer and cinema chain owner. He was president and chief operating officer of Lippert Theatres, Affiliated Theatres and Transcontinental Theatres, all based in San Francisco, and at his height, he owned a chain of 139 movie theaters.
He helped finance more than 300 films, including the directorial debuts of Sam Fuller, James Clavell, and Burt Kennedy. His films include I Shot Jesse James (1949) and The Fly (1958) and was known as "King of the Bs".
In 1962, Lippert said, "the word around Hollywood is: Lippert makes a lot of cheap pictures but he's never made a stinker".
Biography
Born in Alameda, California[1] and adopted by the owner of a hardware store, Robert Lippert became fascinated by the cinema at an early age. As a youngster, he worked a variety of jobs in local theaters, including projectionist and assistant manager. As a manager of a cinema during the Depression, Lippert encouraged regular attendance with promotions such as "Dish Night" and "Book Night."
Lippert went from cinema manager to owning a chain of cinemas in Alameda in 1942, during the peak years of theater attendance.[2] Lippert's theaters in Los Angeles adopted a "grindhouse" policy, screening older and cheaper films for a continuous 24 hours with an admission price of 25 cents. Not only did his theaters attract shift workers and late-night revelers, but also servicemen on leave who could not find cheap accommodations and would sleep in the chairs.[3]
In May 1948, he merged his theater chain with George Mann's,[4] the founder of the Redwood Theatres.[5] [6] He also owned a number of drive-ins.[7] The 139 theaters he eventually owned were mostly in Northern California and southern Oregon, as well as some in Southern California and Arizona.
Screen Guild Productions
"Every theater owner thinks he can make pictures better than the ones they sent him," Lippert later said. "So back in 1943 [sic] I tried it" (the year was actually 1945). Dissatisfied with what he believed to be exorbitant rental fees charged by major studios, Lippert formed Screen Guild Productions in 1945, its first release being a Bob Steele western called Wildfire, filmed in then-unusual Cinecolor.[8] Veteran producer Edward Finney partnered with Lippert in 1946.
For the next few years Screen Guild entered into agreements with independent producers Finney, William Berke, William David, Jack Schwarz, Walter Colmes, and Ron Ormond to guarantee a steady supply of releases.[9] One of the most controversial Screen Guild releases was The Burning Cross (1947), which concerned the Ku Klux Klan.[10] In the main, however, Lippert concentrated on simple entertainments for small-town and neighborhood theaters: musicals, comedies, detective stories, action-adventure stories, and westerns.
Lippert Pictures
See main article: Lippert Pictures. Screen Guild became Lippert Pictures in 1948, using rental stages and the Corriganville Movie Ranch for the production of its films. Between 1948 and 1955, 130 Lippert features were made and released.
Lippert's fortunes and reputation improved when he sponsored screenwriter and former newspaper reporter Samuel Fuller. Fuller wanted to become a director, so he agreed to direct the three films he had been contracted to write for Lippert: I Shot Jesse James, The Baron of Arizona and The Steel Helmet, all for no extra money, accepting just the directing credit.[11] The Fuller films received excellent reviews.
A 1949 New York Times profile said Lippert owned 61 theaters. It also reported (erroneously) that he had directed most of the Westerns his company had made.[12]
Lippert tried to add luster to his productions, but only if it could be done economically. His studio became a haven for actors whose careers were interrupted when their studios, no longer making lower-budget pictures, released them from their contracts. Robert Lippert was able to sign major-studio talent for a fraction of the usual rate, giving his productions more marquee value. Among the established names who worked for Lippert were George Raft, Veronica Lake, Zachary Scott, Robert Hutton, Joan Leslie, Cesar Romero, George Reeves, Ralph Byrd, Richard Arlen, Don "Red" Barry, Robert Alda, Gloria Jean, Sabu, Jon Hall, Ellen Drew, Preston Foster, Jean Porter, Anne Gwynne, Jack Holt, Dick Foran, Hugh Beaumont, Tom Neal, Robert Lowery, John Howard, and Julie Bishop.
Lippert maintained a small stock company of supporting actors, including Margia Dean, Mara Lynn, Don Castle, and Reed Hadley. Lippert's most ubiquitous actor was probably the diminutive Sid Melton. He appeared as a supporting comedian in many of Lippert's productions and starred in three hour-long comedies.
Lippert also contracted with independent producers. In 1950 Ron Ormond hired two former members of the Hopalong Cassidy franchise, Russell Hayden and James Ellison, to co-star in a new series of six western features, with ingenue Betty Adams (later established as Julie Adams) and a stock company of actors familiar from westerns. With typical economy, Ormond arranged for all six scripts to be filmed simultaneously, to take advantage of the sets, locations, and actors on hand. The six features were filmed within one month.
The "name" cast ensembles were only part of Lippert's successful formula. Other selling angles were achieved when certain of Lippert's features could be marketed in a process more elaborate than ordinary black-and-white. Lippert used Cinecolor and sepiatone to dress up his more ambitious features, and embellished others by using tinted film stock for special effects (mint green for Lost Continent, pinkish red-sepia for the Mars sequences in Rocketship X-M). He even anticipated the 3-D film craze by publicizing a special, deep-focus photographic lens developed by Stephen E. Garutso, which Lippert promoted as giving a stereoscopic effect without special projection equipment.
In addition to his original productions, Lippert reissued older films to theaters under his own brand name, including several Hopalong Cassidy westerns and the Laurel and Hardy feature Babes in Toyland (reissued by Lippert as March of the Wooden Soldiers).
Lippert read a 1949 Life magazine article about a proposed rocket landing on the Moon. He rushed into production his version called Rocketship X-M, released a year later in 1950; he changed the film's destination to Mars to avoid copying exactly the same idea being utilized by producer George Pal in his large-budget, high-profile Destination Moon. Rocketship X-M succeeded in becoming the first post-war science fiction outer space drama to appear in theaters, but only by 20 days, while capitalizing on all the publicity surrounding the Pal film. More importantly, it became the first feature film drama to warn of the dangers and folly of full-scale atomic war.
Television and trade unions
Lippert was anxious to enter the new and profitable field of commercial television. In 1950 he filmed a new detective series intended for sale to television -- but appearing in movie theaters first. Six half-hour episodes were filmed with co-stars Hugh Beaumont and Edward Brophy, which were then combined into three theatrical features: Pier 23, Danger Zone, and Roaring City. Trade reviewers noticed the paste-ups: "Having similar situations and dialogue, these episodes would be better if shown separately. Any dramatic effect achieved in the first loses its punch when so closely duplicated by a second story following immediately afterwards."[13] Lippert later acquired episodes of the TV series Ramar of the Jungle and combined them into action features.
In 1951 Lippert announced plans to sell his films to television, at a time when major studios withheld their film libraries from TV to protect their theatrical interests. The American Federation of Musicians stepped in, and Lippert had to rescore some of the films and pay an amount to the musicians' music fund.[14] [15]
Lippert went ahead with the sale but clashed with the Screen Actors Guild[16] and was blackballed by the Guild as a result.[17] [18] He was going to make films for television with Hal Roach, Jr., but problems with the Screen Actors Guild led to their cancellation. He ended up making only two, Tales of Robin Hood and Present Arms (released as As You Were).[19] |In October 1951, Lippert signed a three-picture deal with the recently blacklisted Carl Foreman.[20] He also signed a two-picture deal with blacklisted Paul Henreid[21] but no films appear to have resulted; Henreid signed instead with Columbia Pictures. In 1951, Lippert entered into an arrangement with Famous Artist Corporation to make features with their talent.[22] By January 1952, however, the SAG dispute had not been resolved and Lippert announced he was leaving film production.[23] [24]
Hammer Films
In 1951, Lippert signed a four-year production and distribution contract with the British company Hammer Films by which Lippert would distribute Hammer movies in America, and Hammer would distribute Lippert's films in the UK. To ensure familiarity with American audiences, Lippert insisted on an American star supplied by him in the Hammer films he was to distribute. The first film produced under the contract was The Last Page,[25] which starred George Brent.
20th Century-Fox
Regal Pictures
When Darryl F. Zanuck announced his CinemaScope process, he faced hostility from many theater owners who had gone to great expense to convert their theaters to show 3-D films that Hollywood had stopped making. Zanuck assured them that they could have a large supply of CinemaScope product because Fox would make CinemaScope lenses available to other film companies and start a production unit, led by Lippert, called Regal Pictures in 1956 to produce B pictures in that process.
Lippert's company was contracted to make 20 pictures a year for seven years, each to be shot in seven days for no more than $100,000. Due to Lippert's problems with the film unions over not paying residuals to actors and writers of his films when they were sold to television, Fox chose not to publicize Lippert's participation. Ed Baumgarten was officially appointed the head of Regal, but Lippert had overall control.[26] [27] Regal Pictures filmed its movies with CinemaScope lenses, but due to 20th Century-Fox insisting that only its "A" films would carry the CInemaScope label, Regal's product used the term "Regalscope" in its films' credits.[28]
Beginning with Stagecoach to Fury (1956), Regal produced 25 pictures in its first year.[29]
Maury Dexter, who worked at Regal, later recalled the outfit's productions were all shot at independent sound stages because they could not afford to shoot at 20th Century Fox, due to the high cost of rental and overhead they charged. The films were entirely financed and released by Fox, but Regal was independent. Dexter says "the only stipulation production-wise was that we had to give Bausch and Lomb screen credit on each film for CinemaScope camera lenses, as well as being charged back to Fox, $3,000 of each budget.[30]
Impressed by the unit's profits, Fox extended Regal's contract by a further 16 films with an "exploitation angle" that would be approved by Fox.[31]
In November 1957, Regal announced that they would make ten films in three months.[32]
Regal made a deal with actors and directors to play them a percentage of any money from the sale of films to television. It did not make a deal with writers, and the Screen Writers Guild forbade its writers to work for Lippert. Regal stopped making films.
In 1960, Lippert sold 30 Regal films to television for $1 million.[33]
In October 1958, a new company was formed by Lippert, now called Regal Films, to make low-budget films for Fox at the rate of one per month, starting with Alaskan Highway. The company was headed by George Warren, a cost controller for MGM, with William Magginetti as production supervisor and Harry Spaulding as story editor. Lippert was described as being "associated" with the company.[34]
"We use hack writers or new writers and beat-up faces or new faces", he said later. "No, I don't direct any of them. I wouldn't be a director for anything. No wonder they all have ulcers."
Associated Producers Incorporated
In 1959, Lippert renamed Regal as Associated Producers Incorporated (API) to make more low-budget films for double features[35] (API having similar initials to exploitation specialist American International Pictures may have been coincidental).
The core of API was Harry Spalding and Maury Dexter. All API's productions were done in-house.
In October 1959, Lippert said making "little Bs" for $100,000 was no longer as lucrative because "it is now in the same category as the short TV feature which people can see for free."[36] He persuaded Fox to start financing his films up to $300,000 and a shooting schedule of around 15 days starting with The Sad Horse.[36]
"I have an angle on everything", he said in 1960, adding that he found it profitable to focus on small towns and country areas. "There's a lot of money in sticks."[37]
In 1962, Lippert criticized Hollywood for the "slow suicide" in movie going, blaming involvement of New York bankers in creative matters, inflated overhead, union featherbedding and obsolete theaters.[38]
"The economics of this business have gone cock-eyed", he added. "The total gross of pictures has dropped from 20-30% and the costs have doubled. It's nuts."[39] By this stage, he estimated that he had made "about 300 films" including 100 for Fox in five years. "One year, I made 26, more than the rest of the studios."[39]
"Most Bs cost $100,000 or $200,000", he said. "We shoot them in six or seven days. There's hardly any re-shooting. Unless something is glaringly wrong, we let 'em go. What the hell, people don't care. They want to be entertained. I've heard people coming out of my theaters after seeing a double bill that featured a big production, 'Everybody died' or 'How that girl suffered. Thank God for the little picture'."[39]
Lippert said that he wanted to make more Westerns "because they're cheap" but did not because "television had saturated the market."[39]
Faced with increasing production costs in Hollywood, Lippert announced in 1962 that he would be making films in England, Italy (The Last Man on Earth), and the Philippines. Fox ended Regal/API when its own production schedule had declined and it didn't have enough "A" features to support its "B" pictures.[40]
Later career
In March 1966, Fox announced that Lippert would return to film production with Country Music.[41]
Lippert's association with Fox ended after 250 films with The Last Shot You Hear that began filming in 1967 but was not released until 1969.[42]
After stopping producing, Lippert doubled his chain of theaters from 70 to 139 and managed them until his death.
Personal life
In 1926, he married Ruth Robinson and they remained married until his death. He has a son, Robert L. Lippert Jr., and a daughter, Judith Ann. His son followed his father into producing and also helping manage the theater chain. Maury Dexter says Lippert had a mistress, Margia Dean, who would be cast in the company's films at Lippert's insistence.[43]
Death
Lippert died of a heart attack, his second, at home in Alameda, California on November 16, 1976.[44] His cremated remains were interred at the Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Colma, California.
Select filmography
See main article: List of Lippert Pictures films.
Produced by Action Pictures, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
- (1945) – starring Bob Steele, produced by William David, directed by Robert Emmett Tansey
- Northwest Trail (1945) – starring Bob Steele, produced by William David, directed by Derwin Abrahams
- God's Country (1946) – starring Bob Steele, produced by William David, directed by Robert Emmett Tansey
Produced by Affiliated Productions, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
Produced by Golden Gate Pictures, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
Produced by Edward F. Finney Productions, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
Produced by Somerset Pictures, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
Produced by Jack Schwarz Productions, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
Distributed only by Screen Guild Productions
Reissues
Hopalong Cassidy Westerns
Other reissues:
Featurettes
- The Case of the Baby Sitter (1947) – produced by Carl Hittleman for Screen Art Pictures Corp.
- The Hat Box Mystery (1947) – produced by Hittleman
- Bandit Island (1953) – 3-D short
- A Day in the Country (March 13, 1953) – 3-D short
- College Capers (1953) – 3-D short
Produced by Ron Ormond for Western Adventure Productions, distributed by Screen Guild Productions
Distributed by Screen Guild and produced by Lippert Productions
- Shoot to Kill (1947) – produced and directed by William Berke
- Jungle Goddess (1948) – written by Jo Pagano, produced by William Stephens, directed by Lewis D. Collins
- 40,000 Eyes (1948)[45]
- Thunder in the Pines (1948) – produced by William Stephens, directed by Robert Edwards
- Shep Comes Home (1948) – produced by Ron Ormond, written and directed by Ford Beebe
- Highway 13 (1948) produced by William Stephens, directed by William Berke
- Black Stallion (1948) aka The Return of Wildfire – produced by Carl Hittleman, directed by Ray Taylor
- Last of the Wild Horses (1948) – directed by Robert Lippert (the only film he directed)
- Arson, Inc. (1949) – directed by William Berke
- Deputy Marshal (1949) – directed by William Berke
- Red Desert (1949) aka Texas Manhunt – directed by Ford Beebe
- Treasure of Monte Cristo (1949) – directed by William Berke
- Sky Liner (1949) – produced by William Stephens, directed by William Berke
- I Shot Jesse James (1949) – produced by Carl Hittleman, written and directed by Sam Fuller
- Grand Canyon (1949) – produced by Carl Hittleman, directed by Rob Landres
- Rimfire (1949) – produced by Ron Ormond, directed by B. Reeves Eason
- Texas Manhunt (1949) aka Red Desert – starring Don Barry, directed by Ford Beebe
- Apache Chief (1949) – directed by Frank McDonald
- Ringside (1949) – directed by Frank McDonald
- Curfew Breakers (1957) – directed by Alex Wells
Produced by Lippert Productions, distributed by Lippert Productions
- Hollywood Varieties (January 15, 1950)
- Radar Secret Service (January 28, 1950)
- Hostile Country (March 24, 1950)
- Everybody's Dancin' (March 31, 1950) – Nunes-Cooley Productions
- Marshal of Heldorado (April 21, 1950) – starring James Ellison, produced by Ron Ormond, directed by Thomas Carr
- Operation Haylift (May 5, 1950) – directed by William Berke, Produced by Joe Sawyer, written by Dean Riesner & Joe Sawyer
- Colorado Ranger (May 12, 1950) – starring James Ellison, produced by Ron Ormond, directed by Thomas Carr
- Motor Patrol (May 12, 1950) – directed by Sam Newfield
- Rocketship X-M (May 26, 1950)
- West of the Brazos (June 2, 1950) – starring James Ellison, produced by Ron Ormond, directed by Thomas Carr
- Crooked River (June 9, 1950)
- Fast on the Draw (June 30, 1950)
- The Return of Jesse James (September 8, 1950)
- Border Rangers (October 6, 1950)
- Holiday Rhythm (October 13, 1950)
- Bandit Queen (December 22, 1950) – produced and directed by William Berke
- Kentucky Jubilee (May 18, 1951)
- Unknown World (October 26, 1951)
- Superman and the Mole-Men (November 23, 1951)
- Stronghold (February 15, 1952) – Tom Productions
- The Jungle (August 1, 1952) aka Kaadu
- The Tall Texan (February 13, 1953)
- The Great Jesse James Raid (July 17, 1953)
- Fangs of the Wild (April 2, 1954)
- The Cowboy (May 28, 1954) (Documentary)
- Thunder Pass (September 20, 1954)
Other
Produced by Earle Lyon and Richard Bartlett's L&B Productions, released by Lippert Pictures
Produced by Don Barry Productions, released by Lippert Pictures
Produced by Sigmund Neufeld Productions
Produced by Deputy Corporation
- The Baron of Arizona (Mar 1950) – written by Sam Fuller and Homer Croy, produced by Carl Hittleman, and directed by Sam Fuller
- The Steel Helmet (Feb 1951) – written, produced and directed by Sam Fuller
Produced by R and L Productions (Hal Roach, Jr. and Lippert)
International pick-ups
H-N Productions, distributed by Lippert Pictures
Co-productions with Hammer Films
Produced by Associated Film Releasing Corp., Intercontinental Pictures, Inc., distributed by Fox
- Massacre (June 1956) – written by D.D. Beauchamp, produced by Robert L. Lippert Jr, directed by Louis King
Produced by Lippert's Regal Films, distributed by 20th Century Fox
- The Desperadoes Are in Town (Nov 1956) – directed by Kurt Neumann
- Stagecoach to Fury (Dec 1956) – produced by Earl Lyon, directed by William Claxton – nominated for an Oscar
- The Women of Pitcairn Island (Dec 1956) – written by Aubrey Wisberg, directed by Jean Yarbrough
- The Black Whip (Dec 1956) – written by Orville Hampton, produced bu Robert Kraushaar, directed by Charles Marquis Warren
- The Quiet Gun (Jan 1957) aka Fury at Rock River – written and produced by Earle Lyon, directed by William F Claxton
- The Storm Rider (Mar 1957) – written and directed by Edward Bernds, produced by Bernard Glasser
- She Devil (April 1957) – written, produced and directed by Kurt Neumann
- Kronos (April 1957) – produced and directed by Kurt Neumann
- Badlands of Montana (May 1957) – written, produced and directed by Daniel B. Ullman
- Lure of the Swamp (May 1957) – directed by Hubert Cornfield
- The Abductors (Jul 1957) – written and produced by Ray Wander, directed by Andrew McLaglen
- Apache Warrior (July 1957) – directed by Elmo Williams, produced by Plato A. Skouras, written by Carroll Young, Kurt Neumann & Eric Norden
- God Is My Partner (1957) – starring Walter Brennan, directed by William F. Claxton, produced by Sam Hersh
- Hell on Devil's Island (Aug 1957) – written by Steven Ritch, produced by Leon Chooluck and Laurence Stewart, directed by Christian Nyby
- Under Fire (Sept 1957) – written by James Landis, produced by Plato A. Skouras, directed by James B. Clark
- Rockabilly Baby (Oct 1957) – produced and directed by William Claxton
- Ghost Diver (Oct 1957) – written and directed by Richard Einfeld and Merrill G. White
- Young and Dangerous (Oct 1957) – produced and directed by William Claxton
- Plunder Road (Dec 1957) – directed by Hubert Cornfield
- Escape from Red Rock (Dec 1957) – written and directed by Edward Bernds, produced by Bernard Glasser
- Diamond Safari (Feb 1958) – co produced with Scheslinger Org in South Africa – producer and directed by Gerald Mayer
- Ambush at Cimarron Pass (Feb 1958) – early role for Clint Eastwood, directed by Jodie Copelan, produced by Herbert E. Mendelson, written by John K. Butler and Richard G. Taylor
- Showdown at Boot Hill (May 1958) – starring Charles Bronson, directed by Gene Fowler Jr., produced by Harold E. Knox, written by Louis Vittes
- Thundering Jets (May 1958) – directed by Helmut Dantine, produced by Jack Leewood, written by James Landis
- Wolf Dog (July 1958) – produced and directed by Sam Newfield, written by Louis Stevens
- Sierra Baron (July 1958) – written by Houston Brance, produced by Plato Skouras, directed by James B Clark
- Space Master X-7 (Jul 1958) – Directed by Edward Bernds, produced by Bernard Glasser, written by George Worthing Yates and Daniel Mainwaring
- Gang War (July 1958) – starring Charles Bronson, written by Louis Vittes, directed by Gene Fowler Jr
- Villa!! (Oct 1958) – written by Louis Vittes, produced by Plato Skouras, directed by James B Clark
- Frontier Gun (Dec 1958) – Directed by Paul Landres, Produced by Richard E. Lyons, written by Stephen Kandel
- Lone Texan (March 1959) – starring Willard Parker written by James Landis, produced by Jack Leewood, directed by Paul Landres
Co-productions between Regal Films & Emirau Productions, distributed by Fox
Distributed by 20th Century-Fox, produced as Regal but released as 20th Century-Fox
Produced by Lippert's Associated Producers, distributed by 20th Century Fox
- Alaska Passage (Feb 1959) – written and directed by Edward Bernds produced by Bernard Glasser
- The Little Savage (March 1959) – director Byron Haskin, producer Jack Leewood, writer Eric Norden
- The Sad Horse (March 1959) – director James B. Clark, producer Richard E. Lyons, writer Charles Hoffman
- The Miracle of the Hills (July 1959) – written by Charles Hoffman, directed by Paul Landres
- Return of the Fly (July 1959) – written and directed by Edward Bernds, produced by Bernard Glasser
- The Alligator People (July 1959) – directed by Roy Del Ruth, produced by Jack Leewood, written by Orville H. Hampton
- Five Gates to Hell (Sept 1959) – written, produced and directed by James Clavell
- The Oregon Trail (Sept 1959) – written by Louis Vittes, produced by Richard Einfelfd, directed by Gene Fowler Jr
- Blood and Steel (Dec 1959) – produced by Gene Corman, directed by Bernard L. Kowalski
- The 3rd Voice (Jan 1960) – written & directed by Hugh Cornfeld, produced by Maury Dexter
- Valley of the Redwoods (May 1960) – director William Witney, producer Gene Corman, written by Leo Gordon & Daniel Madison
- Young Jesse James (Aug 1960) – starring Ray Strickland & Willard Parker, written by Orvill Hampton, produced by Jack Leewood, directed by William F Claxton
- Walk Tall (Sept 1960) – written by Joseph Fritz.produced & directed by Maury Dexter
- Desire in the Dust (Oct 1960) – starring Raymond Burr, produced and directed by William F Claxton
- Freckles (Dec 1960) – Directed by Andrew McLaglen, written and produced by Harry Spalding
- The Secret of the Purple Reef (Dec 1960) – produced by Gene Corman, directed by William Witney
- Tess of the Storm Country (Dec 1960) – Directed by Paul Guilfoyle, produced by Everett Chambers, written by Charles Lang & Rupert Hughes
- Twelve Hours to Kill (April 1960) – directed by Edward L. Cahn, produced by John Healy
- 13 Fighting Men (April 1960) – directed by Harry W. Gerstad, Produced by Jack Leewood, Screenplay by Robert Hamner & Jack W. Thomas
- The Long Rope (Feb 1961) – written by Robert Hamner, produced by Margia Dean directed by William Witney
- Sniper's Ridge (Feb 1961) – produced and directed by John A. Bushelman, written by Tom Maruzzi
- The Canadians (Mar 1961) – written and directed by Burt Kennedy (his directorial debut)
- The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come (April 1961) – produced by Maury Dexter, directed by Andrew McLaglen
- The Silent Call (May 1961) – directed by John A. Bushelman, produced by Leonard A. Schwartz, written by Tom Maruzzi – last appearance of Gail Russell
- Misty (June 1961) – starring David Ladd, directed by James Clark, written by Ted Sherdeman
- 20,000 Eyes (Jun 1961) – written by Jack Thomas, produced & directed by Jack Leewood
- Battle at Bloody Beach (Jun 1961) – starring Audie Murphy, written and produced by Richard Maibaum, directed by Herbert Coleman
- The Big Show (Jul 1961) – starring Esther Williams and Cliff Robertson – written by Ted Sherdeman, directed by James B. Clark, produced by Clark and Sherdeman
- 7 Women from Hell (Oct 1961) – Directed by Robert D. Webb, Produced by Harry Spalding, Written by Jesse Lasky Jr
- The Two Little Bears (Nov 1961) – written and produced by George W George, directed by Randall Hood
- The Purple Hills (Nov 1961) – produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Hand of Death (Mar 1962) – produced and written by Eugene Ling, directed by Gene Nelson
- The Broken Land (April 1962) – starring Jack Nicholson, directed by John A. Bushelman, produced by Leonard A. Schwartz, written by Edward J. Lakso
- The Cabinet of Caligari (May 1962) – written by Robert Bloch, produced and directed by Robert Kay
- Womanhunt (June 1962) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Air Patrol (Jul 1962) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- The Firebrand (Aug 1962) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Young Guns of Texas (Nov 1962) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- The Day Mars Invaded Earth (Feb 1963) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- House of the Damned (Mar 1963) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Police Nurse (May 1963) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Harbor Lights (Jul 1963) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- The Young Swingers (Sept 1963) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Thunder Island (Sept 1963) – written by Jack Nicholson and Don Devlin, produced & directed by Jack Leewood
- Surf Party (Jan 1964) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Felicia (1964)- written & directed by David E. Durston, produced by Steve Bono
Produced by Princess Production, released by Fox
Produced by Associated Producers but released as a 20th Century-Fox production, released by Fox
Produced by Associated Producers, released in US by American International Pictures
Produced by Capri Production, distributed by 20th Century-Fox
Produced by Lippert Films, distributed by 20th Century-Fox (in England)
- Witchcraft (Mar 1964) – starring Lon Chaney Jr, written by Harry Spalding, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Don Sharp
- The Horror of It All (Aug 1964) – written by Ray Russell, directed by Terence Fisher
- Night Train to Paris (Sept 1964) – written by Harry Spalding, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Robert Douglas
- The Earth Dies Screaming (Oct 1964) – written by Harry Spalding, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Terence Fisher
- Raiders from Beneath the Sea (Dec 1964) – written by Harry Spalding, produced and directed by Maury Dexter
- Curse of the Fly (May 1965) – written by Harry Spalding, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Don Sharp
- Wild on the Beach (Aug 1965) – written by Harry Spalding, produced & directed by Maury Dexter
- (Oct 1965) – written by Harry Spalding, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Bernard Knowles
- The Return of Mr. Moto (Oct 1965) – produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Edward Morris
- The Murder Game (Dec 1965) – written by Harry Spalding, Iving Yergin, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Sidney Salkow
- The Last Shot You Hear (May 1969) – produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Gordon Hessler
Produced by Lippert Films, distributed by Feature Film Corp, made in Philippines
Produced by Lippert Films, distributed by 20th Century-Fox (made in US)
Produced by Jack Parsons-Neil McCallum Productions, filmed in England, released by Paramount
Produced by Jack Parsons-Neil McCallum Productions, filmed in England, released by Fox
Produced by Parroch-McCallum with API, distributed by Paramount, filmed in England
- Troubled Waters (1964) – Parroch-McCallum – starring Tab Hunter, produced by Lippert and Jack Parsons – released by Fox
- The Woman Who Wouldn't Die (1965) aka Catacombs – written by Daniel Mainwaring, produced by Jack Parsons, directed by Gordon Hessler – released by Warners
Other Lippert movies distributed by 20th Century-Fox
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Obituary of Robert L Lippert Mission Mortuary . 2023-12-26 . missionmortuary.com . en-US.
- http://mst3k.booyaka.com/episodes/directors/robert_lippert.txt Booyaka.com
- p. 110 Maury Dexter Interview by Tom Weaver I Talked with a Zombie: Interviews with 23 Veterans of Horror and Sci-Fi McFarland
- News: Mustering-out pay dead line changed. May 21, 1948. Los Angeles Times. .
- News: Hollywood comes to Woodland . 8 January 2023 . . 18 February 2007.
- News: Doran . Bob . Tale of Two Theaters . 8 January 2023 . . en.
- News: JOSEPH W. TAYLOR. The Wall Street Journal. July 9, 1948. Outdoor movies. .
- Book: Fernett, Gene. Hollywood's Poverty Row 1930–1950. 1973. Coral Reef Publications.
- News: Jul 15, 1946. LAURENCE OLIVIER IN NEW FILM ROLE. New York Times. .
- News: Big temblor staged for 'green dolphin, street' -- KKK expose -- addenda. T. F.. Jun 1, 1947. New York Times. .
- Fuller, Samuel A Third Face Alfred A. Knopf (2002)
- News: BY WAY OF REPORT. A. H. W.. Jan 30, 1949. New York Times. .
- Monthly Film Bulletin, Jan. 1, 1951, p. 378.
- News: First contract signed to allow sale of movies to television. Apr 25, 1951. Wall Street Journal. .
- News: LIPPERT, PETRILLO IN ACCORD ON VIDEO. THOMAS F BRADY. Apr 24, 1951. New York Times. .
- News: HOLLYWOOD AND TV. J.D. SPIRO.. Jul 1, 1951. New York Times. .
- News: HOLLYWOOD SCENES. T. M.. Sep 9, 1951. New York Times. .
- News: Oct 31, 1951. AUTRY SUES STUDIO OVER FILMS FOR TV.. New York Times. .
- News: LIPPERT CANCELS MOVIES FOR VIDEO. THOMAS M PRYOR. Jul 13, 1951. New York Times. .
- News: Oct 25, 1951. FOREMAN SETS UP OWN FILM CONCERN. New York Times. .
- News: Oct 27, 1951. BISCHOFF LEAVING R.K.O. FOR WARNERS. New York Times. .
- News: HOLLYWOOD MEMOS. T. M.. Dec 9, 1951. New York Times. .
- News: MUSICAL TO STAR ESTHER WILLIAMS. THOMAS M PRYOR. Jan 6, 1954. New York Times. .
- News: HOLLYWOOD'S MILITANT STAND. T. M.. Jan 13, 1952. New York Times. .
- Book: Lyons, Arthur . Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir!. 2000. Da Capo Press. 978-0-306-80996-5. 115.
- p.94 Maury Dexter Interview by Tom Weaver I Talked with a Zombie: Interviews with 23 Veterans of Horror and Sci-fi McFarland
- Dexter p 89
- http://www.widescreenmuseum.com/widescreen/cslist.htm Widescreenmuseum.com
- News: BUSY HOLLYWOOD. T. M.. Sep 15, 1957. New York Times. .
- Dexter p 88
- p.103 Dombrowski, Lisa The Films of Samuel Fuller: If You Die, I'll Kill You! Wesleyan University Press
- News: REGAL TO START TEN FILMS SOON. THOMAS M PRYOR. Nov 19, 1957. New York Times. .
- News: National telefilm concern buys 30 films from regal. Jan 21, 1960. Wall Street Journal. .
- News: 12 MOVIES ADDED TO FOX SCHEDULE. THOMAS M PRYOR. Oct 8, 1958. New York Times. .
- p.105 Heffernan, Kevin Ghouls, Gimmicks and Gold: Horror Films and the American Movie Business 2004 Duke University Press
- News: Scheuer, P. K.. Lippert hails era of $300,000 hits.. Oct 26, 1959. Los Angeles Times. .
- News: Scheuer, P. K.. Showman divulges first-aid program.. Sep 5, 1960. Los Angeles Times. .
- News: MOTION PICTURES. . Aug 5, 1963. Los Angeles Times. .
- News: Ryon, A. . Sep 23, 1962. Third-run film king tells industry's woes. Los Angeles Times. .
- p.117 Dexter
- News: Martin. B. March 31, 1966. 'Impossible' script ready. Los Angeles Times. .
- News: 'Last' to end Lippert association with 20th. February 23, 1968. Los Angeles Times. .
- Dexter p 99
- Variety. November 24, 1976. Robert Lippert Dead at 67. 6.
- News: Screen guild's slate revealed. . May 1, 1948. Los Angeles Times. .