Lambert Hillyer

08.07.1893, Tyner - 05.07.1969, Los Angeles

 

Director

American film director and screenwriter.

He graduated from Drake College, worked as a newspaper reporter and actor in vaudeville and theater. During World War I, he began working in films and became a prolific director and screenwriter, working on many silent westerns by William S. Hart, Buck Jones, Tom Mix and others.

Often associated with producer Thomas H. Ince, Hillyer expanded into romantic melodramas and crime films in the 1920s. In 1936, he directed two chillers for Universal, the sci-fi film The Invisible Air and the cult horror Dracula's Daughter. He directed the first film portrayal of Batman, a 15-part serial produced in 1943 that was re-released as a feature film in 1965.

He directed many B movies for Columbia Pictures in the 1930s and early 1940s, including westerns which were his specialty.

Hillyer finished his career directing low-budget dramas and westerns for Monogram Pictures. In the early days of television, he also directed an episode of the syndicated western, The Cisco Kid. He directed at least one episode of Highway Patrol, which starred Broderick Crawford.

Filmography


Films by this director

Dracula's Daughter

(USA, 1936)

Directed by: Lambert Hillyer
PHOTOGRAPHY: George Robinson
Synopsis:

In the coastal English town of Whitby, vampire hunter Professor Abraham Van Helsing has just driven a hawthorn stake into Count Dracula's heart. The dead body of Dracula's assistant Renfield is also lying at the scene of the confrontation, and the old professor is trying to explain the events that took place to two policemen who want to arrest and detain him. He first explains to Sergeant Wilkes and policeman Albert, and then to the skeptical head of Scotland Yard, Sir Basil Humphrey, th...

b/w, 71'
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