Lambert Hillyer(1889-1969)
- Director
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
A former journalist who came from a show-business family--his mother
was actress Lydia Knott--western specialist Lambert Hillyer entered films
in 1917. After becoming a director, he soon teamed up with cowboy actor
William S. Hart for a series of westerns that resulted in making Hart a star,
for which the actor--an old-fashioned man who never forgot a slight or
a favor--always gave Hillyer credit. Although he could never be
considered a stylist, Hillyer often managed to inject his work with the
kind of panache and a flourish that other, bigger-budgeted films
lacked. The opening scene of Beau Bandit (1930), for example, consists of an
eerily atmospheric shot of a posse emerging from a dark, foggy river
crossing; it's a somewhat Germanic touch in an otherwise
undistinguished film. An incredibly prolific director, Hillyer didn't
confine himself to westerns, although they were the majority of his
output. He turned out the stylish Dracula's Daughter (1936) and the creepy and chilling
The Invisible Ray (1935), both for Universal, and even managed to get in a few serials
at Columbia, most notably Batman (1943). Hillyer, like so many B directors
before him, finished out his career in television.