- Born
- Died
- German film director E.A. Dupont was an influential critic and newspaper columnist before breaking into the film industry. He wrote several screenplays and worked as a story editor for Richard Oswald before turning to directing in 1917. Over the next eight years Dupont became a respected exponent of the German expressionist movement. He was particularly acclaimed for his film Variety (1925), which stood out for brilliant lighting effects and fluid camera work. Encouraged by his success, Dupont left Decla-Bioskop and joined Universal in Hollywood, but only completed one film. Crossing the Atlantic again, he signed with British National Pictures in 1928. He briefly became their leading director, again demonstrating his visual flair with two prestige productions: Moulin Rouge (1928) and Piccadilly (1929). The latter was BIP's most expensively made picture up to this time.
After the advent of sound Dupont's career began to falter. His first "talkie", the "Titanic" story Atlantic (1929)-- shot in both English and French-- was an expensive flop, due mainly to poor dialogue and stilted performances. His next two ventures, respectively in France and Germany, had an even worse critical reception. Dupont next tried his luck in Hollywood. After 1933 he worked at different times for Universal, Paramount and Warner Brothers. Critical success proved elusive, as almost all of his assignments were low-budget second features. After being fired from the set of Hell's Kitchen (1939) for slapping a junior member of the cast who had mocked his accent, Dupont spent most of the 1940s in Hollywood as a talent agent and publicist. He eventually resumed his directing career with an offbeat minor film noir, The Scarf (1951), and a watchable precursor to The Flight of the Phoenix (1965), The Steel Lady (1953). Among his last films was the notorious sci-fi stinker The Neanderthal Man (1953). He died of cancer in December 1956.- IMDb Mini Biography By: I.S.Mowis
- SpouseGretl Dupont(March 16, 1930 - ?)
- A star during the silent movie, he was pushed into a corner by the sound film, He was unable to continue that status into the sound era--a fate shared by all too many o his European and American colleagues. As a result. his influence on the film industry in general and the German film industry in particular has been vastly underestimated.
- Was hired by Universal Pictures to make films in the US. Unfortunately, he could not put up with the working conditions there and broke his contract. He left the US for England, where he became a production manager and writer as well as a director.
- He was rocketed to prominence with Variety (1925), which was a huge hit not only in Germany but also in the US.
- His last film in Germany was Salto Mortale (1931), after which he was hired by Universal Pictures to make films in the US. Unfortunately, his career never really caught on there and he drifted from Universal to Paramount to MGM and then to Warners. . Things got so bad there that while directing Hell's Kitchen (1939) with the East Side Kids, he actually came to blows with at least one of the cast members; he was fired and replaced by Lewis Seiler. He didn't wok as a director for ten years after that, spending that time as a talent agent.
- In 1918 he was hired by Stern-Film-GmbH as an author and director for a detective serial with Max Landa. Up to that time he had never been inside a film studio. Over the next year he shot 12 of the serial's chapters.
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