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Compton Bennett

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Name
  
Compton Bennett

Role
  
Film director

Died
  
August 11, 1974, Sussex


Compton Bennett Compton Bennett Movies Bio and Lists on MUBI

Movies
  
King Solomon's Mines, The Seventh Veil, That Forsyte Woman, Gift Horse, The Flying Scot

Similar People
  
Andrew Marton, Sydney Box, Richard Carlson, Lowell Gil, Muriel Box

The Gift Horse Trailer 1952


Herbert William "Bob" Compton Bennett (15 January 1900 – 11 August 1974), better known as Compton Bennett, was an English film director, writer and producer. He is perhaps best known for directing the 1945 film The Seventh Veil and the 1950 version of the film King Solomon's Mines, an adaptation of an Allan Quatermain story.

Bennett was born in Tunbridge Wells, England. At the beginning of his career, he worked as a band leader and a commercial artist before trying his hand at amateur filmmaking. One of these early films helped him land a job at Alexander Korda's London Films in 1932. There, he became a film editor; later he would help make instructional and propaganda films for the British armed forces during World War II.

Bennett's films tended to be sombre, but were very popular with the moviegoing public. In 1947, Bennett accepted an invitation to go to Hollywood, but his directing style appeared to suffer in the American studio system of the era. It was, however, during this time that he directed King Solomon's Mines.

Bennett eventually returned to the UK. From 1954 to 1957, he left film work to pursue interests in the theatre and television, but produced four films in 1957, After the Ball, Man-Eater, That Woman Opposite and The Flying Scot. Although he continued to write and direct for film and television, his subsequent productions were not as well received.

Bennett died in Sussex, England at the age of 74.

References

Compton Bennett Wikipedia