Pictures from Google Image Search

Alton, John

International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers | 2001 | | Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

ALTON, John



Cinematographer. Nationality: Hungarian. Born: Sopron, Hungary, 5 October 1901. Career: Began film career at Cosmopolitan Studios, New York; Lab technician, MGM, 1924; cameraman, Paramount; worked on Spanish-language films in France and South America; returned to Hollywood, 1937 (some sources say 1939). Awards: Academy Award, with Alfred Gilks, for An American in Paris, 1952; Career Achievement Award, Los Angeles Film Critics Association, 1993. Died: Santa Monica, California, 2 June 1996.


Films as Cinematographer:

1933

Los Tres Berretines [uncredited] (+ d)

1934

El Hijo de papá (+ d, pr, sc)

1935

Big Calibre (Bradbury)

1937

El Pobre Pérez (Amadori)

1938

Madreselva (Amadori)

1939

Caminito de Gloria (Amadori); Puerta cerrada (Saslavsky)

1940

Remedy for Riches (Kenton); Dr. Christian Meets the Women (McGann); Three Faces West (The Refugee ) (Vorhaus); The Courageous Dr. Christian (Vorhaus)

1941

The Devil Pays Off (Auer); Forced Landing (Wiles); Melody for Three (Kenton); Power Dive (Hogan)

1942

The Affairs of Jimmy Valentine (Unforgotten Crime ) (Vorhaus); Ice-Capades Revue (Ice-Capades ; Rhythm Hits the Ice ) (Vorhaus); Johnny Doughboy (Auer); Moonlight Masquerade (Auer); Mr. District Attorney in the Carter Case (The Carter Case ) (Vorhaus); Pardon My Stripes (Auer)

1944

The Lady and the Monster (The Lady and the Doctor ; Monster and Tiger Man ; Tiger Man ) (Sherman); Lake Placid Serenade (Sekely); Storm Over Lisbon (Inside the Underworld ) (Sherman); The Sultan's Daughter (Dreifuss); Enemy of Women (Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels ; Mad Lover ; The Private Life of Paul Joseph Goebbels ) (Zeisler); Atlantic City (McCarey)

1945

Girls of the Big House (Archainbaud); Song of Mexico (FitzPatrick); Love, Honor and Goodbye (Rogell); I Was a Criminal (Captain of Koepenick ; Passport to Heaven ) (Oswald)

1946

Affairs of Geraldine (Blair); A Guy Could Change (Howard); The Madonna's Secret (Thiele); The Magnificent Rogue (Rogell); Murder in the Music Hall (Midnight Melody ) (English); One Exciting Week (Beaudine)

1947

Driftwood (Dwan); The Ghost Goes Wild (Blair); Hit Parade of 1947 (McDonald); T-Men (Mann); The Trespasser (Blair); Winter Wonderland (Vorhaus); Wyoming (Kane); Bury Me Dead (Back Home From the Dead ) (Vorhaus); The Pretender (Wilder)

1948

Canon City (Wilbur); He Walked by Night (Werker, Mann [uncredited]); Hollow Triumph (The Scar ) (Sekely); Raw Deal (Mann); The Spiritualist (The Amazing Mr. X ) (Vorhaus)

1949

Captain China (Foster); The Crooked Way (Florey); Reign of Terror (Black Book ) (Mann); Border Incident (Mann); Red Stallion in the Rockies (Murphy)

1950

Grounds for Marriage (Leonard); Mystery Street (Murder at Harvard ) (Sturges); Devil's Doorway (Mann); Father of the Bride (Minnelli)

1951

It's a Big Country (Brown, Hartman, Sturges, Thorpe, Vidor, Weis, Wellman); An American in Paris (ballet photography) (Minnelli); The People Against O'Hara (Sturges); Father's Little Dividend (Minnelli)

1952

Talk About a Stranger (Bradley); Washington Story (Target for Scandal ) (Pirosh); Apache War Smoke (Kress)

1953

I, the Jury (Essex); Take the High Ground! (Brooks); Count the Hours (Every Minute Counts ) (Siegel); Battle Circus (Brooks)

1954

Cattle Queen of Montana (Dwan); Duffy of San Quentin (Men Behind Bars ) (Doniger); Passion (Dwan); Witness to Murder (Rowland); Silver Lode (Dwan)

1955

The Big Combo (Lewis); Pearl of the South Pacific (Dwan); Escape to Burma (Dwan); Tennessee's Partner (Dwan)

1956

Slightly Scarlet (Dwan); Tea and Sympathy (Minnelli); The Teahouse of the August Moon (Mann); The Catered Affair (Wedding Breakfast ) (Brooks)

1957

Designing Woman (Minnelli)

1958

The Brothers Karamazov (The Murderer Dmitri Karamazov ) (Brooks)

1959

Lonelyhearts (Miss Lonelyheart ) (Donehue)

1960

Elmer Gantry (Brooks); Twelve to the Moon (12 to the Moon ) (Bradley)

1966

Mission: Impossible (TV Seriespilot only)

Publications


By ALTON: book


Painting with Light, Berkeley, 1995.


On ALTON: book

Coursodon, Jean-Pierre, ed., American Directors, vol. 1, New York, 1983.

On ALTON: articles

Comer, B., "John Alton, ASC to Be Saluted by Museum of the Moving Image," in American Cinematographer (Hollywood), vol. 75, no. 5, May 1994.

Obituary, in Variety (New York), vol. 363, no. 6, 10 June 1996.

Handzo, Stephen, American Cinematographer (Hollywood), September 1996.

Obituary, in EPD Film (Frankfurt), vol. 13, no. 9, September 1996.

Obituary, in Positif (Paris), no. 427, September 1996.

Sarris, Andrew, in Bright Lights vol. 1, no. 4, Fall 1996.

Obituary, in The Performing Arts, 1996. Film, Television, Radio, Theatre, Dance, Music, Cartoons, and Pop Culture, by Harris M. Lentz III, Jefferson, N.C., 1997.


* * *

It is often claimed that film noir is more a matter of visual style than of content. If so, cinematographers no less than directors and screenwriters should perhaps be listed among the true auteurs of the noir cycle, and John Alton would certainly rank as one of its prime exponents. In the heyday of the cycleespecially in the early thrillers of Anthony Mann and in Joseph H. Lewis's cult classic, The Big Combo Alton created archetypes of noir's main genre, the urban thriller. But he also ingeniously extended the idiom into genres with which it is less readily associated, such as the western and the costume drama.

Alton's eclectic professional background provided ideal training for the financial and stylistic economies of noir. Born in Hungary, he started his film career at the Cosmopolitan Studios in New York before heading for Hollywood to shoot low-budget silent westerns for the notoriously fast-working "One Shot" Woody Van Dyke. From there he moved to the Paramount studios at Joinville near Paris, then spent six years heading up a new studio in Buenos Aires. on returning to Hollywood in 1939 he found himself assigned to several years of negligible B-movies. By the time he encountered Anthony Mann, he knew just how to lend an aura of quality to the most shoestring production.

For some years Alton had been trying to persuade the directors he worked with that a cinematographer didn't simply "pump light into a scene. The light has to tell something. There's a meaning, and it establishes a mood." In Mann he at last found "a director I can really sit down and talk with," someone sensitive to the subtleties of light and shadow. In T-Men, their first film together, and its successors, his "intense downbeat virtuosity," as Stephen Handzo put it, meshed with Mann's acute spatial sense to produce "an unmistakable style: deep perspective compositions with half-illuminated faces in the foreground . . . distant backgrounds, ceilinged sets, pervasive darkness and gloom created through high-contrast lighting and filters, angular composition, all creating a screen space at once expansive yet oppressively fatalistic."

Mann readily paid tribute to Alton's skill in helping him achieve the maximum effects with the minimum means. For The Black Book, working to the usual modest budget, Alton contrived a richly atmospheric evocation of Revolutionary France, turbulent and treacherous, largely from shadows and silhouettes. He created an equally alienated visual mood for the location exteriors of Border Incident, as also for Devil's Doorway, the first in Mann's great series of westerns.

Though his film noir work is in many ways his most interesting, Alton was too professional a craftsman to limit himself to a single style. His association with Allan Dwan, which began with Driftwood, took in several of the veteran director's autumnal late westerns, including Silver Lode and Tennessee's Partner. To these he brought an austere lyricism, gently melancholy in its clarity, and long, elegant but unobtrusive tracking shots. In Dwan's Slightly Scarlet he demonstrated another facet of his talent, matching James M. Cain's over-heated melodrama with a Technicolor palate of startlingly garish hues set off by areas of deep shadow. The result, according to Andrew Sarris, was "one of the most eye-boggling American movies ever made."

Other directors with whom Alton often worked included Vincente Minnelli and Richard Brooks. His Minnelli films saw him turning the glossy MGM house-style to advantageas in Father of the Bride, where Spencer Tracy's nightmare vision of the wedding ceremony crumbling into disaster is all the more surreal for being shot with such knife-edge crispness. Alton's sole Academy Award came for his work on the climactic final ballet of An American in Paris, set to Gershwin's tone poem. Whatever the pretensions of the ballet itself, there is no gainsaying the virtuosity of Alton's lighting and camerawork.

For Brooks, Alton produced moodier, more downbeat effects, sometimesas in The Brothers Karamazov deliberately jarring. In an attempt to suggest the psychological turmoil of Dostoyevsky's characters, he devised an expressionistic lighting scheme that threw deep shadows of saturated primary colours, a technique widely dismissed as crude and overemphatic. A similar approach, but more subtly applied, worked far better in Elmer Gantry. John Fitzpatrick noted how Alton's photography "catches the Dust Bowl reds and browns by day and casts them against blue-black voids at night." Many of the movie's nocturnal episodes, though filmed in colour, convey a noirish feel of claustrophobic obsession.

Alton's last masterpiece of pure noir cinematography was The Big Combo, routine gangland-vengeance stuff transmuted by its visual treatment. Jean-Pierre Coursodon observed how "Lewis's carefully studied spatial organization and positioning of actors, matched by John Alton's masterful balance of sparse lighting and engulfing darkness in predominantly deep-focus setups, create a dazzlingly rich texture which at times . . . verges on the abstract." In its blend of trash content and sheer overwrought style, The Big Combo strikingly exemplifies how, in the hands of a master like Alton, cinematography can on occasion take precedence over script, acting, and possibly even directing, in determining the key quality of the creative mix.

Philip Kemp

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Kemp, Philip. "Alton, John." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 17 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Kemp, Philip. "Alton, John." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (December 17, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3406802160.html

Kemp, Philip. "Alton, John." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Retrieved December 17, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3406802160.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Hoboken north, Hoboken south
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 10/23/2008; 351 words ; The Record (Bergen County, NJ) 10-23-2008 Hoboken north, Hoboken south Date: 10-23-2008, Thursday Section: NEWS...Cresskill suggested we look into a little-known HobokenHoboken, Ga. The tiny lumber town in southeastern...
HOBOKEN STOPS WH AGAIN
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 12/5/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...Bergen County, NJ) 12-05-1999 HOBOKEN STOPS WH AGAIN By J.P. PELZMAN, Staff...the same as a year ago: Wayne Hills and Hoboken playing for the Group 3, Section 1 football...Dortch ran for four touchdowns and the Hoboken defense stifled Wayne Hills en route to...
Hoboken, N.J.: More than Sinatra and baseball.
Newspaper article from: Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 10/24/2005; ; 700+ words ; Byline: Robert K. Elder HOBOKEN, N.J. _ "It was right here...of the first baseball game, most of Hoboken's gargantuan factories, docks used...Waterfront" and nearly all trace of Hoboken's vaudeville scene. Like evolving...
Hoboken gives Sinatra a new stamp of approval
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 5/17/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...Bergen County, NJ) 05-17-2003 Hoboken gives Sinatra a new stamp of approval...One Star B Biographical: FRANK SINATRA HOBOKEN -- In this city where Frank Sinatra was...bar, restaurant, and dry cleaners in Hoboken," Nancy Sinatra said jokingly during...
DRIVING INTO HOBOKEN? ARE YOUR PAPERS IN ORDER?
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 4/6/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...County, NJ) 04-06-2001 DRIVING INTO HOBOKEN? ARE YOUR PAPERS IN ORDER? By JEFFREY...THE ROAD WARRIOR During the Sixties, Hoboken's claim to fame was that it contained...than any other town in the U.S. Sure, Hoboken is where Sinatra was born, up on Monroe...
The City of Hoboken and New Jersey Transit present the sixth annual Hoboken Festival.
PR Newswire; 9/8/1986; 700+ words ; HOBOKEN, N.J., Sept. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- Mayor Thomas Vezzetti of Hoboken and NJ Transit officials today announced that the sixth annual Hoboken Festival will be held on Saturday, Sept. 27, rain or shine, at the historic Hoboken Terminal...
Hoboken, state launch revisionist drive on baseball's birth: first commemoration of game's start in Hoboken, June 15. (New Jersey) (NEWS ADVISORY)
PR Newswire; 5/22/1990; 682 words ; ...TO CITY, SPORTS AND ASSIGNMENT DESKS: HOBOKEN, STATE LAUNCH REVISIONIST DRIVE ON BASEBALL...FIRST COMMEMORATION OF GAME'S START IN HOBOKEN, JUNE 19 "Pure fiction! Hollywood hyperbole...American people -- and the world!" Hoboken Mayor Patrick Pasculli is referring to...
HOBOKEN ROLLS BY OLD TAPPAN
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 11/23/1997; ; 617 words ; ...Correspondent The Record (Bergen County, NJ) 11-23-1997 HOBOKEN ROLLS BY OLD TAPPAN By THOMAS SIMONE JR., Correspondent...Section: SPORTS Edition: All Editions -- Sunday HOBOKEN -- Hoboken continued its winning streak Saturday, but it did...
A celebration of Hoboken
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 9/29/2002; ; 700+ words ; 00-00-0000 A celebration of Hoboken JIM BECKERMAN Date: 09-29-2002...back street festivals will celebrate Hoboken's music and history. After 20 years...be appearing today at the Ninth Annual Hoboken Fall Arts & Music Festival. Historically...
As Wall Street Slips, Hoboken Stumbles; Home to Financial Workers, N.J. City Feels Strain of Crisis
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 12/14/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...Sept. 11, 2001, Gordon, a longtime Hoboken resident, was working for the financial...Gordon, 55, has been forced to leave Hoboken, his home of the past 24 years and where...the country. Gordon said he will miss Hoboken, calling it "a wonderful community...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Hoboken
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Hoboken , city (1990 pop. 33,397), Hudson...train on tracks in the United States. Hoboken became an important industrial and commercial...housing and easy access to New York City. Hoboken's reputation has grown accordingly...
Hoboken, Anthony van
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music Hoboken, Anthony van (b Rotterdam, 1887; d Zurich, 1983). Dutch musicologist. In 1927 founded Vienna nat. archive of photographs...
Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken Land & Improvement Co.
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken Land & Improvement Co. , 18 How (59 U.S.) 272 (1856), argued 30, 31 Jan., 1, 4 Feb. 1856, decided 19 Feb...
Sinatra, Frank
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians ...discography Sources Frank Sinatra was born in Hoboken, New Jersey, on December 12, 1915...and dancing trio which later became The Hoboken Four. “I always liked to sing...Sinatra; born December 12, 1915, in Hoboken, N.J.; son of Anthony Martin (a...
Stevens, John
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History ...side of the Hudson River, in what is now Hoboken, New Jersey. It was there that Stevens...Stevens bought a ferry service between Hoboken and New York and sought to improve it...locomotive on a circular track on his estate in Hoboken. Stevens dedicated his life to improving...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: