Biography
A messenger boy at Paramount in the mid 1920s, Edward Dmytryk became an editor in the 1930s and began directing in 1935. By the mid '40s he had such impressive credits as
The Devil Commands (1941) with
Boris Karloff; the anti-fascist
Hitler's Children (1943); the noirs Murder, My Sweet (1944) and
Cornered (1945), starring
Dick Powell; and
Crossfire (1947), one of the first Hollywood films to confront anti-Semitism. In 1948 Dmytryk became one of the "Hollywood Ten" when he was accused of having ties to the communist party and was sentenced to a year in prison for contempt of Congress. Following his imprisonment, Dymtryk was blacklisted in the U.S., so he directed three films in England, but returned to the States in 1951. Upon his return he went before the House Un-American Activities Committee again, this time as a "friendly" witness, and his name was dropped from the blacklist. He then resumed his American career and directed four films for producer
Stanley Kramer, most notably
The Sniper (1952) and
The Caine Mutiny (1954). Dmytryk went on to make several notable films in the 1950s, including the westerns
Broken Lance (1954) with
Spencer Tracy and
Warlock (1959) with
Henry Fonda, and the World War II drama
The Young Lions (1958), starring
Marlon Brando and
Montgomery Clift. His subsequent work was well-made but unremarkable. ~ All Movie Guide