Harold D. Schuster
A highly regarded editor (he cut the classic Sunrise (1927) ), Harold D. Schuster started out in films as an actor. It didn't take him long to abandon that career, and he turned to the production side of the business, working his way up to editor and eventually taking the reins as a director. While much of his directorial output is routine, there are some real gems scattered throughout. My Friend Flicka (1943) is a beautiful, serene tale of a boy and a spectacular horse and was a major success in its day. Although typed as an "outdoors" director, Schuster could turn out tough, gritty little thrillers when he wanted to, such as Loophole (1954), about a bank teller who gets framed for an embezzlement; it ranks right up there with the edgy crime dramas of Don Siegel and Phil Karlson. Schuster's western Dragoon Wells Massacre (1957), despite its potboiler title, is a sharp, well-paced effort about two disparate groups of travelers who must band together to fight off rampaging Indians. Good writing, a rousing score and Schuster's tight direction raise this several notches above the product normally churned out by its studio, the usually low-grade Allied Artists. Schuster eventually turned to series television, and finished out his career there.
Acting
Crew
Movie
Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans
Editor
1927
Movie
The Iron Horse
Assistant Editor
1925
Movie
So Dear to My Heart
Director
1948
Movie
Chandu the Magician
Editor
1932
Movie
Call Her Savage
Editor
1932
Movie
My Friend Flicka
Director
1943
Movie
Finger Man
Director
1955
Movie
Berkeley Square
Editor
1933
Movie
Zoo in Budapest
Editor
1933
Movie
Loophole
Director
1954
Movie
Marie Galante
Editor
1934
Movie
Tarzan's Hidden Jungle
Director
1955