Robert Kurrle — Little Close-Ups of the A. S. C. (1922) 🇺🇸
Robert B. Kurrle, A. S. C, after seven years at the camera, still thinks it the greatest game in the world and he finds more genuine delight in shooting a scene than John D. gets out of a game of golf or Chauncey Depew out of an after-dinner speech.
Mr. Kurrle has but recently returned from New York where he has been associated with Director Edwin Carewe and he expects to renew the affiliation very soon again as Mr. Carewe, like most other eastern producers, is coming to Camerafornia to make pictures.
Remember “Breakers Ahead?” That was Robert Kurrle’s first picture. It was directed by Charles Brabin. Then followed “The Trail to Yesterday,” No Man’s Land, “Hitting the High Spots,” “The Spenders,” “Faith,” “Blind Man’s Eyes,” “One Thing at a Time O’Day,” “Boston Blackie’s Redemption,” “Easy to Make Money,” Lombardi Ltd., “The Right of Way,” “The Lion’s Den,” “Rio Grande,” “The Trail’s End,” “Habit,” “White Ashes,” “Playthings of Destiny” and “Her Great Price,” starring Anita Stewart; “Isobel,” with House Peters; The Invisible Fear and “A Question of Honor” directed by Carewe; “None So Blind,” a Fox feature produced in New York.
Mr. Kurrle is a deep student of his profession and knows both the camera and the laboratory. He believes that the cameraman is the one great essential to picture making and like all other members of the A. S. C. he works untiringly for the glory of his profession and for the advancement of the Society of which he is a valued member.

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Collection: American Cinematographer, February 1922
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