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Robert Gottschalk (March 12, 1918 – June 3, 1982) was an American camera technician, inventor, and co-founder of Panavision. Early life.
Dangerous Charter is a 1962 seagoing adventure film shot in five days in 1958 on and around Santa Catalina Island.California, with no studio shooting.It was directed, co-produced and co-written by Robert Gottschalk as a showcase for his Panavision process.
Robert Holland Duell: October 1, 1875: 1877 Ellis Spear: January 30, 1877: 1878 Halbert Eleazer Paine: November 1, 1878: 1880 Edgar M. Marble: May 7, 1880: 1883 Benjamin Butterworth: November 1, 1883: 1885 Martin Van Buren Montgomery: March 23, 1885: 1887 Benton Jay Hall: April 12, 1887: 1889 Charles Elliott Mitchell: April 1, 1889: 1891 ...
Panavision Inc. is an American motion picture equipment company founded in 1954 specializing in cameras and lenses, based in Woodland Hills, California.Formed by Robert Gottschalk as a small partnership to create anamorphic projection lenses during the widescreen boom in the 1950s, Panavision expanded its product lines to meet the demands of modern filmmakers.
Richard Moore died at his home in Palm Springs, California, on August 16, 2009, of complications from old age. [1] He was 83 years old. Moore was survived by his son, Stephen V. Moore, and daughter, Marina Moore, who was born in the Bahamas while Moore was shooting underwater scenes for the 1965 James Bond film, Thunderball. [1]
Gottschalk or Godescalc (Old High German) is a male German name that can be translated literally as "servant of God". Latin forms include Godeschalcus and Godescalcus . Similarly, the Arabic equivalent of the name is Abdullah (عبد الله), which also translates to "servant of God," reflecting a shared linguistic and cultural concept of ...
This is a list of notable German actors from 1895, the year of the first public showing of a motion picture by the Lumière brothers, to the present.Actors are listed in the period in which their film careers began and the careers of most spanned more than just one period.
Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 U.S. 63 (1972), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled that a process claim directed to a numerical algorithm, as such, was not patentable because "the patent would wholly pre-empt the mathematical formula and in practical effect would be a patent on the algorithm itself."