Phil Rosen(1888-1951)
- Director
- Cinematographer
- Producer
Russian-born Phil Rosen began his film career as a cameraman during the
silent era, and worked his way into directing. Rosen was a highy
regarded director in the silent era, as evidenced by the fact that when
MGM fired Josef von Sternberg from Exquisite Sinner (1926)--for, among other things, his
extravagance, slow shooting schedule and total disregard for the
budget--the studio brought in Rosen to re-edit, re-shoot and generally
tighten it up, and by most contemporary accounts he did a first-rate
job. However, like all too many of his colleagues of the period, the
success he enjoyed during the silent era didn't carry over into talking
pictures, and Rosen spent most of the rest of his career churning out
B-grade (and cheaper) fodder for outfits like Monogram, PRC, and the
bottom-of-the-barrel states-rights market.