Karl Hasselmann  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 8 May 1883 | 
| Died | 8 June 1966 (aged 83) | 
| Occupation | Cinematographer | 
| Years active | 1906–1952 | 
Karl Hasselmann (8 May 1883 – 8 June 1966) was a German cinematographer who worked on over a hundred films during a long career. He collaborated with Ewald André Dupont on a number of productions for Gloria Film such as Whitechapel. He worked on eleven films with Karl Grune.[1]
Hasselmann was born on 8 May 1883 in Hanover; he died at the age of 83 on 8 June 1966 in West Berlin.
Selected filmography
- The White Roses of Ravensberg (1919)
 - Alkohol (1919)
 - Whitechapel (1920)
 - Hearts are Trumps (1920)
 - The White Peacock (1920)
 - The Vulture Wally (1921)
 - The Conspiracy in Genoa (1921)
 - Murder Without Cause (1921)
 - Man Overboard (1921)
 - Night and No Morning (1921)
 - The Hunt for the Truth (1921)
 - Othello (1922)
 - A Dying Nation (1922)
 - The Earl of Essex (1922)
 - The Street (1923)
 - Arabella (1924)
 - Garragan (1924)
 - Op Hoop van Zegen (1924)
 - Jealousy (1925)
 - Slums of Berlin (1925)
 - The Iron Bride (1925)
 - Comedians (1925)
 - The Brothers Schellenberg (1926)
 - Children of No Importance (1926)
 - People to Each Other (1926)
 - Sister Veronika (1927)
 - The Catwalk (1927)
 - Sir or Madam (1928)
 - Lemke's Widow (1928)
 - Under the Lantern (1928)
 - Eva in Silk (1928)
 - Katharina Knie (1929)
 - The Convict from Istanbul (1929)
 - Painted Youth (1929)
 - Children of the Street (1929)
 - The Man with the Frog (1929)
 - Checkmate (1931)
 - Between Night and Dawn (1931)
 - Different Morals (1931)
 - Trenck (1932)
 - The Roberts Case (1933)
 - What Men Know (1933)
 - The Legacy of Pretoria (1934)
 - The Brenken Case (1934)
 - Inspector of the Red Cars (1935)
 - The Hour of Temptation (1936)
 - The Accusing Song (1936)
 - Madame Bovary (1937)
 - The Secret Lie (1938)
 - Men, Animals and Sensations (1938)
 - Woman in the River (1939)
 - The Girl at the Reception (1940)
 - Clarissa (1941)
 - Wild Bird (1943)
 - Quartet of Five (1949)
 
References
- ↑ Bergfelder & Bock p. 175
 
Bibliography
- Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise CineGraph. Encyclopedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.
 
External links
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