Mark Robson

Mark Robson

director, producer, editor

Mark Robson was born on Dec 04, 1913 in Canada. Mark Robson's big-screen debut came with The Magnificent Ambersons directed by Orson Welles in 1942. Mark Robson is known for Von Ryan's Express directed by Mark Robson, Frank Sinatra stars as Col. Joseph L. Ryan and Trevor Howard as Maj. Eric Fincham. Mark Robson has got 1 awards and 13 nominations so far. The most recent award Mark Robson achieved is Walk of Fame. The upcoming new movie Mark Robson plays is Avalanche Express which will be released on Oct 19, 1979.

Mark Robson studied political science and economics at the University of California. He then took a law course at Pacific Coast University, and, at one time, also attended the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. Ultimately, his interests led him elsewhere, since he ended up in the movie business as a part-time assistant set dresser in the property department of 20th Century Fox. Asking studio boss Darryl F. Zanuck for a promotion turned out to be a bad move, since he was promptly fired. Playing golf with RKO executive Herman Zobel, conversely, opened the door to a position at the studio's film library, where he was to earn a meager 66 cents per hour. Undeterred, Robson eventually moved up to the position of assistant editor and worked (uncredited) on Orson Welles' s Citizen Kane (1941) and La splendeur des Amberson (1942) for $1.25 per hour, but slaving over a gruelling 110 to 120 hour-week. When "Ambersons" and Voyage au pays de la peur (1943) ran into production difficulties, Welles and his Mercury Group fell out of favour at RKO and Robson was re-assigned by Lou L. Ostrow to a B-unit, headed by Val Lewton.Within the relaxed atmosphere of Lewton's company, Robson was employed as full-time editor between 1941 and 1943. He became noted for his outstanding work on La Féline (1942). During the famous pool scene, he originated a technique called 'the bus', abruptly cutting from the face of a person in terror (in this case Simone Simon) to a bus stopping violently with hissing airbrakes, thus effectively jolting the audience in their seats. The 'bus', of course, could be substituted for any other sudden event, intended as a red herring in order to shock the viewer. It is still a widely used practice today, particularly in horror movies or thrillers.After editing Vaudou (1943) and L'Homme-léopard (1943), Robson was promoted by Lewton to director as a replacement for Jacques Tourneur. Robson's first film was La Septième Victime (1943), a tale of Satanists operating in Greenwich Village. This was followed by three more entries in Lewton's series of low budget horror thrillers: Le vaisseau fantôme (1943), L'île des morts (1945) and Bedlam (1946). All of these modest ventures recouped their investment fourfold. In the long run, however, it was not enough to save struggling RKO. Robson lost his job and found himself on the bread line for the next two years. In 1949, he was head-hunted by independent producer Stanley Kramer to direct the boxing drama Le champion (1949), starring Kirk Douglas as a callous boxing champ on his way to the top. This prestige production marked the turning point in Robson's career. Bosley Crowther, the leading New York Times reviewer, praised the director for providing "a wealth of pictorial interest and exciting action of a graphic, colourful sort" (NY Times, April 11 1949). Robson made another film for Kramer, Je suis un nègre (1949), which dealt with the results of racial prejudice.Suddenly finding himself much in demand, Robson worked briefly under contract for Samuel Goldwyn, before launching the second phase of his career as a director of big budget commercial hits, among them the charismatic Les ponts de Toko-Ri (1954); another hard-hitting tale of corruption in the world of boxing, Plus dure sera la chute (1956); the stylishly-made small-town melodrama Les Plaisirs de l'enfer (1957); and the unabashedly sentimental, romanticised 'true-life' story of an English missionary in China, L'auberge du sixième bonheur (1958) (filmed in North Wales !). One of his best later films was the Paul Newman thriller Pas de lauriers pour les tueurs (1963), directed by Robson in a style entirely reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock, filled with rollicking action and witty dialogue. That same year, Robson established his own production company, Red Lion. He made several patchy films under this banner, including a stodgy, fictionalised account of the Ghandi assassination À neuf heures de Rama (1963); and a dull, forgettable anti-war drama, Les centurions (1966). The lurid, but slickly-made melodrama La vallée des poupées (1967) rekindled Robson's career, which was rounded out with the all-star blockbuster disaster movie Tremblement de terre (1974), filmed in 'Sensurround' for greater impact. A massive box-office hit, it eventually grossed in excess of 80 million dollars. Robson died of a heart attack just weeks after completing work on the action thriller Avalanche Express (1979).

  • Birthday

    Dec 04, 1913
  • Place of Birth

    Montréal, Québec, Canada

Known For

Awards

1 wins & 13 nominations

Walk of Fame
1960
Motion Picture
Winner - Star on the Walk of Fame

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies