William Witney

William Witney

Birthday: 1915-05-15

Place of Birth: Lawton, Oklahoma, USA

Biography: ​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. William Nuelsen Witney (15 May 1915 – 17 March 2002) was an American film and television director. He is best remembered for the movie serials he co-directed with John English for Republic Pictures such as Daredevils of the Red Circle, Zorro's Fighting Legion and Drums of Fu Manchu. He directed many Westerns during his career, and is credited with devising the modern system of filming movie fight sequences in a series of carefully choreographed shots, which he patterned after the musical sequences of American director Busby Berkeley.[1] Prolific and pugnacious, Witney began directing while still in his 20s, and continued until 1982. Quentin Tarantino singles out Witney as one of his favorite directors, particularly for The Golden Stallion (1949), a Roy Rogers vehicle.[2] Witney also directed Master of the World (1961) starring Vincent Price and Charles Bronson. Description above from the Wikipedia article William Witney, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

Movies

Fighting With Kit Carson
Fighting With Kit Carson

In this Western, comprised of 12 chapters from a serial, Kit leads a group carrying a large gold shi...

View Movie
The Wild Blue Yonder
The Wild Blue Yonder

Wendell Corey and Forrest Tucker star as a pair of World War II Army Air Corps officers. In between ...

View Movie
The Republic Pictures Story
The Republic Pictures Story

A history of Republic Pictures studios, featuring hundreds of clips plus on-camera interviews with s...

View Movie
Quell and Co.
Quell and Co.

A malevolent land mogul has threatened an honest group of Texas homesteaders, and when the innocent ...

View Movie
Roy Rogers, King of the Cowboys
Roy Rogers, King of the Cowboys

Thys Ockersen enjoyed in his childhood in the Fifties with his friends the Roy Rogers pictures in th...

View Movie