Joseph H. Lewis
After service in the US Army Signal Corps during WWII, Lewis returned to Hollywood and the B-movie. He had a box-office success with the fast-paced, low-budget melodrama "My Name Is Julia Ross" (1945) in which Nina Foch plays a secretary who becomes the prisoner of her crazy employers. "So Dark the Night" (1946) offered strong production values and focused on the ill-fated romance between a Parisian detective and a country girl while the Technicolor "The Swordsman" (1947) was Lewis' version of the swashbuckling adventure. The Melvin Frank-Norman Panama script for "The Return of October" (1948) offered the director better than his usual material. A charming fantasy about a young woman (Terry Moore) who believes her uncle was reincarnated as horse, the film is not to everyone's taste but Lewis acquitted himself well. 1949, however, marked the debut of "Deadly Is the Female/Gun Crazy," loosely inspired by the story of Bonnie and Clyde, considered as one of Lewis' best with almost non-stop action that is stylishly handled. Marred only by a somewhat wooden performance by lead Peggy Cummins, the film has remained a favorite of critics. Better but forgotten efforts, though, include "Undercover Man" (1949), shot in a documentary-style and starring Glenn Ford in the title role, and "Retreat, Hell!" (1952), an above average war drama set in the early days of the Korean Conflict. "Cry of the Hunted" (1953) benefited from a superb performance by Vittorio Gassman as an escaped prisoner. The best of Lewis' noir dramas was "The Big Combo" (1955), about a love triangle among a cop (Cornel Wilde), a brutal mobster (Richard Conte) and the woman (Jean Wallace) to whom they are both attracted. Bolstered by John Alton's photography and a jazz score, the film has achieved a cult status. His final feature work was a return to Westerns (albeit with a different, more mature approach). After turning to television in the late 50s and early 60s, Lewis retired. It was only during the 60s when the French put forth the auteur theory (which was co-opted by American critics) that Lewis' work began to formally attract notice. In addition to receiving various tributes from European film festivals, Lewis was one of the subjects of Peter Bogdanovich's acclaimed 1997 book "Who the Devil Made It," a series of essays and interviews with pioneering film directors.