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  1. 21 de oct. de 2008 · John M. Stahl fue uno de esos directores del Hollywood clásico, hoy un tanto olvidados injustamente. Suyas son películas tan importantes como 'Que el cielo la juzgue' o 'Las llaves del reino'. El gran Douglas Sirk (ése al que algún director español dice parecerse, con todo el morro del mundo) realizó sendos remakes de dos de las obras de Stahl: 'Imitación a la vida' y 'Sublime obsesión ...

  2. 24 de mar. de 2020 · I knew John M. Stahl’s 1945 film Leave Her to Heaven by reputation only until I got the new release from The Criterion Collection for review. I had heard it referred to as a technicolor noir, and one that was quite dark. I had heard great things, including that it was a masterpiece.

  3. John M. Stahl. John Malcolm Stahl was an American film director and producer. Born in New York City, New York, he began working in the city's growing motion picture industry at a young age and directed his first silent film short in 1914. In the early 1920s Stahl signed on with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in Hollywood and in 1924 was part of the ...

  4. Descubre películas, series y cortos dirigidas por John M. Stahl disponibles en Filmin. Inicio Películas Series Colecciones Festivales Más Últimos días Novedades Próximamente The Filmin Times Temas Recomendador Promociones Regala Filmin Blog Prensa ...

  5. Gene Tierney in Leave Her to Heaven by guest contributor doctor sabelotodo Author's Disclaimer Not until I started researching and...

  6. 26 de jun. de 2015 · “Perhaps the most significant factor in John M. Stahl’s success . . . is his accurate understanding of ‘the woman’s viewpoint,’ ” a Los Angeles Times reporter wrote in 1931. Stahl’s reputation as a man who made women’s pictures would reach its height in the years that followed, with films like Back Street, Only Yesterday, and Imitation of Life.

  7. Like his subsequent films Back Street (1932) and Only Yesterday (1933), Seed pivots on a successful, independent career woman bumping into a man she once loved and can’t forget. Each time, the man is played by John Boles, a bland mannequin with the generic good looks of a collar ad and eerily inexpressive eyes.