Edward A. Kull
Edward A. Kull (December 10, 1885 – December 22, 1946) was an American cinematographer and film director.[1] He worked on 101 films between 1916 and 1946. He also directed 43 films between 1919 and 1938. He was born in Illinois and died in Hollywood, California.
Edward A. Kull | |
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Kull in 1921 | |
Born | |
Died | December 22, 1946 61) Hollywood, California | (aged
Occupation | Cinematographer Film director |
Years active | 1916–1946 |
Partial filmography
- The Mainspring (1916)
- The Social Buccaneer (1916)
- The Measure of a Man (1916)
- Her Soul's Inspiration (1917)
- Polly Redhead (1917)
- A Jewel in Pawn (1917)
- The Charmer (1917)
- Come Through (1917)
- The Little Orphan (1917)
- The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin (1918)
- The Face in the Watch (1919) – directed
- The Pointing Finger (1919)
- The Sleeping Lion (1919)
- The Vanishing Dagger (1920) – directed
- The Diamond Queen (1921) – directed
- Terror Trail (1921) – directed
- Bulldog Courage (1922)
- With Stanley in Africa (1922) – directed
- The Apache Raider (1928)
- The Bronc Stomper (1928)
- Yellow Contraband (1928)
- Making the Varsity (1928)
- The Black Ace (1928)
- The Boss of Rustler's Roost (1928)
- .45 Calibre War (1929)
- King of the Wild (1931)
- Quick Trigger Lee (1931)
- Headin' for Trouble (1931)
- The Cyclone Kid (1931)
- Lariats and Six-Shooters (1931)
- Murder at Dawn (1932)
- The Savage Girl (1932)
- The Scarlet Brand (1932)
- 45 Calibre Echo (1932)
- Tangled Fortunes (1932)
- Human Targets (1932)
- The Man from New Mexico (1932)
- The Penal Code (1932)
- High Gear (1933)
- Carnival Lady (1933)
- The New Adventures of Tarzan (1935)
- Man's Best Friend (1935) – directed
- Law of the Wolf (1939)
- Port of Hate (1939)
- Riders of the Sage (1939)
- Fangs of the Wild (1939)
- Covered Wagon Trails (1940)
- Guns of the Law (1944)
- Brand of the Devil (1944)
- Marked for Murder (1945)
gollark: Or apache. That can do it too, apparently. Most HTTP servers probably can.
gollark: I don't think it would technically need to do a *full* reverse proxy job, since all it needs to do is look at the Host header (or SNI on HTTPS requests, although that might go away at some point?) and route accordingly, but still.
gollark: I suppose you could install caddy instead of nginx too, but I don't like it.
gollark: ```apache<VirtualHost *:80> ServerName thing1.com ProxyPass "/" "http://192.xxx.xxx.25"</VirtualHost>```seems like something which should work.
gollark: That would probably make your "edge" thing quite busy, since it would effectively be working as... half a reverse proxy.
References
- "Edward A. Kull". allmovie. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
External links
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