Spaghetti Western Director ~ Edwin J. Collins
Edwin Joseph Collins was a British film director,
actor, and writer known for his prolific contributions to silent cinema in the
United Kingdom during the 1910s and 1920s.
Born in 1875 in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England,
Collins worked extensively in early British film production, directing numerous
shorts and features that included literary adaptations, comedies, and period
dramas. His notable directorial works include ''God and the Man'' (1918), ''The
Green Caravan'' (1922), and an adaptation of ''The Taming of the Shrew''
(1923).
He also appeared as an actor in several productions and
contributed as a writer to some of his films. Collins died on January 14, 1937.
in Richmond, Surrey, England. He was 62 years old.
Edwin J. Collins directed two Silent western films: “A
Rake's Romance” in 1910 and “The Scapegrace” in 1913
COLLINS, Edwin J. (aka Ed Collins) (Edwin Joseph Collins) [1875, Cheltenham,
England U. K. - 1/14/1937, Richmond, Surrey, England U.K.] – director, writer,
cameraman, actor.
A Rake's Romance -
1910
The Scapegrace –
1913
Spaghetti Western Screenwriter ~ Hal Brady
Hal Brady is an alias for Emilio Paolo Miraglia born in
Casarano, Puglia, Italy in 1924. He was an Italian film director and assistant
director, best known for his work in the giallo genre during the early 1970s.
Miraglia began his career in cinema as an assistant
director and technician, contributing to numerous productions in the 1950s and
1960s. He transitioned to directing in the late 1960s, helming a series of
films that blended elements of thriller, horror, and mystery, often featuring
stylish visuals and intricate plots typical of Italian genre cinema.
Miraglia's most notable works include the atmospheric
giallo films “The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave” (1971), which explores
themes of psychological terror and family secrets, and “The Red Queen Kills
Seven Times” (1972), a supernatural-tinged murder mystery centered on a cursed
family legend. These two films, produced during the peak of Italy's
exploitation cinema boom, established his reputation for crafting tense,
visually striking narratives with strong female leads and baroque set pieces.
His directorial output was relatively modest, spanning only about six feature
films from 1967 to 1972, after which he largely retired from active filmmaking.
Miraglia died in Rome at the age of 58 on August 26,
1982.
As Hal Brady Emilio Miraglia co-wrote the screenplay for
only one Spaghetti western, “Spara Joe... e così sia!” (Joe Dakota) in 1971
with Jean Josipovici
BRADY, Hal (aka Emilio Miraglia, Emilio
P. Miraglia) (Emilio Paolo Miraglia) [1924, Casarano, Puglia,
Italy – 8/26/1982, Rome, Lazio, Italy] – director, assistant director, writer,
cameraman.
Joe Dakota – 1971 (co)
Spaghetti Western Cinematographer ~ Manfred Ensinger
Manfred Ensinger is a German cinematographer known for
his contributions to German television series and films during the second half
of the 20th century.
Born on May 31, 1929, in Haltingen, Baden, German,
Ensinger established a long career as a director of photography, camera
operator, and camera supervisor. He worked on a range of productions, including
episodes of the long-running crime anthology series ‘Tatort’ (“Scene of the
Crime”), the police procedural ‘Polizeiinspektion 1’, and the science-fiction
series ‘Telerop 2009 – Es ist noch was zu retten’, as well as feature films
such as “Die Banditen vom Rio Grande”.
As mentioned above Manfre Ensinger was the
cinematographer on only one Euro-western, “Die Banditen vom Rio Grande” (The
Bandits of the Rio Grande) in 1965
ENSINGER, Manfred [5/31/1929,
Haltingen, Baden-Würtemberg, Germany -
] – director, cinematographer, cameraman.
The Bandits of the
Rio Grande - 1965