Robert L. Lippert Movies

Producer Robert L. Lippert may not be a familiar name to many filmgoers in the 21st century, but as the head of Lippert Pictures in the 1940s and early '50s and founder and president of Regal Pictures in the late '50s, he produced or distributed many a cult favorite. Among the 300 or so movies he produced were notable works by Samuel Fuller, as well as several science fiction efforts, most notably Rocketship X-M and Kronos, that have come to be regarded as minor classics of the genre. Lippert got his entrée into the movie industry from the ground up. He was born on the eve of American cinema's first great blooming as a storytelling medium in the hands of filmmakers such as D.W. Griffith and Charles Chaplin, and found himself spellbound by the new medium as he grew into boyhood. He had little interest in his father's hardware business, instead choosing to run errands and do minor chores at the local movie house so that he could see as many films as possible. He was a fast learner and developed considerable skill as a projectionist -- a job that one could aspire to in those days without a lot of union clearances -- and eventually began improving the projectors with which he worked. Lippert mixed this nuts-and-bolts knowledge of film exhibition with the ambition to succeed, and by his thirties he owned a chain of 60 movie theaters that ran from California to Oregon. In the early '40s, having succeeded at every relevant aspect of showing movies, Lippert decided to try his hand at movie production with a B-Western called Wildfire, starring Bob Steele. Produced through Lippert's fledgling company, Action Pictures, Inc., it was subsequently released in 1945 by Screen Guild, a new company headed by John J. Jones, of which Lippert was vice president. Little of Screen Guild's output was significant, even in B-movie circles, though one release, the horror/suspense vehicle Scared to Death, is notable for its bizarre structure and, as a Cinecolor release, for being Bela Lugosi's only color film. By 1948, Lippert had taken over the company completely and re-organized it as Lippert Pictures the following year. Lippert tried his hand at directing for the first and only time in 1948 with Last of the Wild Horses, but then turned his attention almost exclusively to producing with occasional efforts at writing. Although a lot of Lippert's releases were of the routine, programmer variety, such as Fast on the Draw and G.I. Jane(Reginald Le Borg's 1951 B-movie, not Ridley Scott's higher-profile work from the late '90s), the studio occasionally generated movies that critics and the public embraced as serious art and entertainment.
On the directorial front, Lippert Pictures had an edge over all of the other B-studios of its era due to the presence of up-and-coming talent Samuel Fuller, whose early films -- The Baron of Arizona, I Shot Jesse James, and The Steel Helmet (arguably the best movie ever issued by Lippert Pictures) -- were all produced there. Additionally, Lippert produced Little Big Horn and Hell Gate, two very fine cavalry and Western adventures, respectively, directed by Charles Marquis Warren. The company was also responsible for producing Rocketship X-M, a film that, along with George Pal's Destination Moon, opened the postwar science fiction boom. It was releases like those that made up for such ill-starred genre efforts as Sam Newfield's The Lost Continent (1951), a sci-fi/jungle adventure disaster that was kidded unmercifully (and justifiably so) on Mystery Science Theater 3000 in the 1990s. [Note: Several other of Lippert 's sci-fi releases were "MST-fied," but on a more good-natured basis.] In 1953, the company also joined England's Hammer Films in a co-production deal for the intriguing sci-fi/espionage hybrid Spaceways. Toward the end of the company's existence, Lippert Pictures also provided an outlet for sci-fi film specialist Bert I. Gordon and his ultra-low-budget interplanetary effort King Dinosaur. Audiences usually knew what to expect from a Lippert Pictures release -- action, adventure, some drama, and a few laughs (most of them intentional) all woven together in an entertaining whole that was always worth (and sometimes worth a good deal more) than the cost of admission; younger viewers, especially, came to appreciate the Lippert titles aimed at them. In 1955, Robert L. Lippert sold out his original company and the following year formed Regal Pictures, an independent production company that distributed its movies through 20th Century Fox. The Fox connection proved important not just as a reliable distributor, but also as a source of films -- when 20th Century Fox made Kurt Neumann's sci-fi thriller Kronos, the project was given to Regal, which benefited from having a film go out under its banner that was shot in Cinemascope. By the early '60s, Robert L. Lippert was regularly crossing over to the Fox lot proper and serving as executive producer on such movies as The Yellow Canary (1963), a crime film starring Pat Boone, that played a quiet but key role in breaking the blacklist by employing Jeff Corey in his first acting role in a dozen years. He was also the producer of Curse of the Fly, the studio's 1965 attempt to extend the "franchise" of The Fly and Return of the Fly to the 1960s. Lippert retired from film production in the mid-'60s and went back to running his original theater chain, having proved himself a success on both ends of the business. Of the 310 movies that he produced, a large handful -- mostly those by Fuller and Warren, plus a few dramas and the science fiction efforts -- are still studied closely as well as shown in repertory theaters and have developed followings on home video. His son, Robert L. Lippert Jr., became a successful editor and later a director of action films. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1969  
PG  
The Last Shot You Hear is taken from the play The Sound Of Murder by William Fairchild. Charles Nordeck (Hugh Marlowe) is a successful marriage counselor whose own marriage is on the rocks. When his wife Anne (Patricia Haines) seeks a divorce, Charles refuses to sign the papers fearing the bad publicity could ruin his career. The adulterous Anne then convinces her lover Peter (William Dysart) to kill her husband and make it look like a robbery. The plan is foiled when Charles' secretary Eileen (Zena Walker), who loves Peter, discovers the plot to kill her boss. This dull suspense feature is plagued by poor audio recording. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Hugh MarloweZena Walker, (more)
1966  
 
Britisher Trader Faulkner goes on his honeymoon with new bride Marla Landi. Little does he suspect that Landi is conspiring with ex-husband Ken Scott to murder Faulkner for his money. Faulkner tumbles to their little scheme, and plots a revenge. The plotters get their just desserts, but Faulkner ends up just as dead as he would have been had he never caught on. Filmed in England, The Murder Game was released in the US by 20th Century-Fox. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ken ScottMarla Landi, (more)
1965  
 
The sagacious Oriental Interpol agent leaves his Hawaiian home to crack a case in London involving the evil Dargo, an ex-Nazi. During a skirmish between them, Dargo believes that he has killed Moto. Unfortunately for the villain it is not so and Moto stops the crook from getting his syndicate control over the world's oil supplies. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1965  
 
In this sci-fi film set in the near future, the civilized world is controlled by an all-powerful computerized government that is carefully choosing colonists for its newest space launch. The candidates are selected on the basis of their age, health and IQ. They are only in space a few weeks when the crew begins to rebel against the inhuman control of the computer. They then mutiny and in place of the autocracy, they establish a small democratic society and begin searching for a planet to call their own. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bill WilliamsKathleen Breck, (more)
1965  
 
This horror movie, the third and final entry in "The Fly" series, features a failed teleportation device, a mad scientist, a fugitive from a looney bin, and a closet full of mutants. The trouble begins again after a young woman escapes from a mental institution and ends up at the home of the Delambre family. There she finds the family leader continuing his experiments in using a machine to teleport people from one place to another. She also finds his handsome son whom she marries. After she discovers a closet filled with failed teleportation experiments, the police are notified. The crazed scientist tries to use his machine. Again it fails and all that remains of the mad inventor is a gooey blob. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Brian DonlevyCarole Gray, (more)
1964  
 
In this spooky horror film set in an old English village, the trouble begins when a man endeavors to dig up a cemetery containing the charred bodies of witches burned at the stake 300 years before. The warlock who looks after the family cemetery tries to stop him, but cannot. As soon as their graves are disturbed, the witches arise and strange things begin to happen to the family of the man who dug them up. Later the true culprit behind the mayhem is revealed. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Lon Chaney, Jr.Jack Hedley, (more)
1964  
 
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A retired spy agrees to help his former boss by helping another agent get some tapes containing defense information to Paris. When his boss is killed, he must stay ahead of the rival agents, eventually learning that the female agent he is helping is one of them. He is able to defeat her and get the tapes to the proper recipients. ~ Steve Huey, All Movie Guide

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1964  
 
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In a post-epidemic nightmare world, scientist Robert Morgan (Vincent Price) is the only man immune to the plague which has transformed the entire population of the Earth into vampire-like creatures. He becomes the monster slayer that vampire-society fears. Curing one of them, Ruth (Franca Bettoja), with a transfusion of his blood gives him hope for the future. It is a short future, however, since the other vampires quickly find and kill him. This dark tale, based on Richard Matheson's even darker novel "I Am Legend," was later remade as The Omega Man with Charlton Heston in the Vincent Price role. ~ Lucinda Ramsey, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Vincent PriceTony Cerevi, (more)
1964  
 
This obscure little science fiction/horror film (a British-American co-production) stars Willard Parker as a heroic astronaut who returns from a test flight to discover that most of England has been utterly destroyed by alien invaders, whose armies of killer robots have transformed nearly all of their victims into zombies. Parker manages to rally together a small resistance army from a few scattered survivors in outlying villages, and they eventually find the earth-based relay point for the transmissions which have enabled the invaders to coordinate the robot attack by remote control. Although entertaining overall, the story lags after a thrilling first half, with the final battle hampered by budget limitations. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

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1949  
 
By the none-too-exacting standards of Screen Guild Productions, Last of the Wild Horses is practically an "A" picture. James Ellison plays Duke Barnum, an innocent soul who is set up as the fall guy for duplicitious horse-ranch foreman Riley (Reed Hadley). When ranch owner Charlie Cooper (Douglass Dumbrille) discovers that Riley has been raiding the neighboring ranchers' stock, he confronts the foreman with the evidence. Riley responds by killing Cooper and placing the blame on Barnum, leading to a deadly climactic confrontation between the two. Filmed on location in Southern Oregon, Last of the Wild Horses was directed by Robert L. Lippert, who'd later assume control of Screen Guild and rename the studio after himself. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
James EllisonMary Beth Hughes, (more)
1949  
 
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Future "Superman" George Reeves and former "Dick Tracy" Ralph Byrd co-star in Thunder in the Pines. The stars play a pair of eternally bickering loggers in Tall Timber country. Both vie for the attentions of Gallic charmer Yvette (Denise Darcel), who promises to wed the logger who cuts down the most trees (this is not a pro-eco piece!) All sorts of adventures ensue before the two loggers swear off "dames" forever -- or at least for the next few minutes. Filmed in "Glowing Sepiatone," Thunder in the Pines benefits from the well-focused location photography by Carl Berger. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
George ReevesRalph Byrd, (more)

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