Edward A. Kull — Little Close-Ups of the A. S. C. (1922) 🇺🇸
Edward Kull, A. S. C, undoubtedly has a biography — most people have — but Edward is another one of the modest men who shrink from the public prints and weep tears of grief when they see their names emblazoned on the screen, the printed page, or the festive billboard.
Some day Edward and his kind will wake up to realize that printers’ ink is the never failing reservoir of enchantment — the Aladdin’s Lamp that makes fortunes over night and the good fairy that brings all things to them who work well and patiently.
Well, anyway, we are glad Mr. Kull’s failure to kick in with a biographical sketch of his cinematic career gave us this opportunity to pay a tribute to printer’s ink while we wait for the opportunity to catch him, rope, hog-tie and brand him and give him the third degree to drag from him the secrets of his past.
About all we can tell you of Edward Kull is that his name is a familiar one on the American screen, always identified with worth while productions and always to the honor of the profession and the A. S. C.
He [Edward A. Kull] is now directing serials at Universal. He staged “The Vanishing Dagger” in eighteen episodes and is now directing “The Queen of Diamonds” a serial in eighteen episodes featuring Eileen Sedgwick.

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Collection: American Cinematographer, February 1922
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