Monday, February 9, 2015

Close Up: Irving Ries and his Brothers


Irving Ries

Irving Ries, cinematographer for Wilbur Durborough's On the Firing Line with the Germans (1915),  features in a recent article by Robert Peters for the New England Journal of Photographic History on the Ries brothers and their place in Hollywood history. The story on how the Ries brothers contributed to the American film industry is in a word fascinating. The brothers had a number of "firsts" in the film industry.

Awarded with the Iron Cross

Before he went to Germany to cover the First World War Irving Ries filmed in Mexico. He was the only American cinematographer awarded the Iron Cross by the German army.  As described in this contemporary trade paper article, Wilbur Durborough had no experience with a movie camera before he went to Germany. So, most of the cinematography for the film On the Firing Line with the Germans was done by Ries.

The article also has more on the infamous "counterfeit" Ries who forged his passport and was sent to Britain as a German spy.  Around 1956, Irving was nominated for an Academy Award for the special effects in Forbidden Planet. He also did the photographic effects for MGM's The Mysterious Island, a Technicolor movie from 1929 that was released ten years before the Wizard of Oz.

The next eldest brother, Ray, did the special effects in two 1939 blockbuster movies: The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind.  One of the brothers, Paul, invented the Ries tripod which was marketed from 1936 and used by many professional cinematographers. The camera tripod is still being made today. For more information go to www.riestripod.com

The article on the Ries brothers can be read and downloaded here.


Sunday, January 18, 2015

Book Trailer Online at YouTube!



Now that our latest book on the American cinematographers of the First World War is available it is time to reveal more of the contents.

So, here is the book trailer that has just been uploaded on YouTube.



                                               


Thursday, January 15, 2015

TV Interview with the Authors

While we were in Pordenone for the book presentation of American Cinematographers in the Great War we did an interview for the Slovenian television, which recently was broadcasted.

Here's a chance to see and hear us talk about World War I and the impact it had on film history. For those of you who do not understand Slovenian, don't worry. After a brief introduction you will hear all three authors talk in English on our recent book and film research.




Check out the video for the TV interview!


                              



Thursday, November 27, 2014

Sneak Preview: Russian Sniper Attack

From January 28, 2015, American Cinematographers in the Great War will be available online and in bookstores both in the United States and Europe. For more information go to the publisher's website:

http://www.johnlibbey.com/books_detail.php?area=cine&ID=168

As a preview, here's a scene from Wilbur H. Durborough war film On the Firing Line with the Germans (1915). Durborough and his camera operator Ries accompanied the German army in the summer of 1915 during the attack on Russian Poland. Their work at times was dangerous, as they noticed while entering the city of Bloni about 16 miles west of Warsaw. The intertitle of the film reads:  "Surprised by Russian snipers at Bloni, in which one man was wounded and we were very nervous for a few minutes while the 'fun' lasted."


Sniper attack - scene from W.H. Durborough's movie

Link to high res image