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  1. 10. Walk on the Wild Side (1962) “Walk on the Wild Side” is a 1962 film directed by Edward Dmytryk and based on a novel by Nelson Algren. The film stars Laurence Harvey, Capucine, Jane Fonda, and Anne Baxter, and tells the story of a drifter named Dove Linkhorn (Harvey) who comes to New Orleans in search of his lost love, Hallie Gerard ...

  2. Edward Dmytryk was a Canadian-born American film director who became famous for film noir in the 1940s. He was a great director and film editor who had made many movies of different genres during his career that spread over more than forty years. Some of these were super hits for which he is still remembered today.

  3. Show all ( 17) Edward Dmytryk's films include Love Affair, Murder, My Sweet, Ruggles of Red Gap, Red Hollywood.

  4. A messenger boy at Paramount in the mid 1920s, Edward Dmytryk became an editor in the 1930s and began directing in 1935. By the mid '40s he had such impressive credits as The Devil Commands (1941) with Boris Karloff; the anti-fascist Hitler's Children (1943); the noirs Murder, My Sweet (1944) and Cornered (1945), starring Dick Powell; and Crossfire (1947), one of the first Hollywood films to confront anti-Semitism.

  5. Apr 7, 2017 · Edward Dmytryk is arguably one of the most influential directors in movie history, with over 50 films to his credit. He was nominated for an Oscar for his film “Crossfire” (1947) and worked with big name stars like John Wayne, Elizabeth Taylor, and Humphrey Bogart. But you may not know that before directing films, Dmytryk was a film editor.

  6. Jan 31, 2023 · his mother died and his father moved Edward and his three broth­ers to San Francisco. The elder Dmytryk remarried, but the family finances required the brothers find work at an early age. One of Edward’s odd jobs in 1923 was as a mes­senger for Famous Players-Lasky, (re-estab­lished as Paramount Pictures) and his movie career began.

  7. Jul 1, 1999 · Back to work as an editor, Dmytryk cut "Three Cheers for Love" (1936), "Easy to Take" (1936) and the musical "Turn Off the Moon" (1937), before returning to the director's chair for "The Trail of the Hawk" (1937). He continued editing films like "Murder Goes to College" (1937), "Bulldog Drummond's Peril" (1938) and "Love Affair" (1939) until ...