Harry Keller


Biography

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

Fast Forward (1985)
Director
In Enemy Country (1968)
Director
The Brass Bottle (1964)
Director
Tammy and the Doctor (1963)
Director
Six Black Horses (1962)
Director
Tammy Tell Me True (1961)
Director
Seven Ways from Sundown (1960)
Director
Gundown at Sandoval (1959)
Director
The Female Animal (1958)
Director
Step Down to Terror (1958)
Director
Day of the Bad Man (1958)
Director
Voice in the Mirror (1958)
Director
Man Afraid (1957)
Director
Quantez (1957)
Director
The Unguarded Moment (1956)
Director
The Gentle Web (1956)
Director
Phantom Stallion (1954)
Director
Marshal of Cedar Rock (1953)
Director
Bandits of the West (1953)
Director
El Paso Stampede (1953)
Director
Red River Shore (1953)
Director
Savage Frontier (1953)
Director
Rose of Cimarron (1952)
Director
Thundering Caravans (1952)
Director
Leadville Gunslinger (1952)
Director
Black Hills Ambush (1952)
Director
Desert of Lost Men (1951)
Director
Fort Dodge Stampede (1951)
Director
Tarnished (1950)
Director
The Blonde Bandit (1949)
Director
A Guy Could Change (1946)
2nd Unit Director

Producer (Feature Film)

Act of Violence (1979)
Associate Producer
Class of '44 (1973)
Executive Producer
Skin Game (1971)
Producer
In Enemy Country (1968)
Producer
Texas Across the River (1966)
Producer
That Funny Feeling (1965)
Producer
Mirage (1965)
Producer
Kitten With a Whip (1964)
Producer
Send Me No Flowers (1964)
Producer
Leadville Gunslinger (1952)
Associate Producer
Captive of Billy the Kid (1952)
Associate Producer
Black Hills Ambush (1952)
Associate Producer
Fort Dodge Stampede (1951)
Associate Producer
Desert of Lost Men (1951)
Associate Producer

Editing (Feature Film)

Transylvania 6-5000 (1985)
Editor
Fast Forward (1985)
Editor
The Man Who Wasn't There (1983)
Editor
Hanky-Panky (1982)
Editor
Stripes (1981)
Editor
Stir Crazy (1980)
Editor
Like Normal People (1979)
Editor
Nero Wolfe (1979)
Editor
Act of Violence (1979)
Editor
The Millionaire (1978)
Editor
The Ghost of Flight 401 (1978)
Editor
The Dakota Kid (1951)
Film Editor
Belle Le Grand (1951)
Film Editor
The Arizona Cowboy (1950)
Film Editor
Borderline (1950)
Film Editor
The Showdown (1950)
Film Editor
Lonely Hearts Bandits (1950)
Film Editor
Covered Wagon Raid (1950)
Film Editor
Hit Parade of 1951 (1950)
Film Editor
Rose of the Yukon (1949)
Film Editor
Too Late For Tears (1949)
Film Editor
The Red Pony (1949)
Film Editor
The Red Menace (1949)
Film Editor
Streets of San Francisco (1949)
Film Editor
Moonrise (1948)
Film Editor
Madonna of the Desert (1948)
Film Editor
Homicide for Three (1948)
Film Editor
Son of God's Country (1948)
Film Editor
Saddle Pals (1947)
Film Editor
Robin Hood of Texas (1947)
Film Editor
Northwest Outpost (1947)
Film Editor
Rustlers of Devil's Canyon (1947)
Film Editor
Angel and the Badman (1947)
Film Editor
Twilight on the Rio Grande (1947)
Film Editor
The Catman of Paris (1946)
Film Editor
Specter of the Rose (1946)
Film Editor
Sun Valley Cyclone (1946)
Film Editor
Gay Blades (1946)
Film Editor
A Guy Could Change (1946)
Film Editor
Passkey to Danger (1946)
Film Editor
My Pal Trigger (1946)
Film Editor
Song of Mexico (1945)
Film Editor
Steppin' in Society (1945)
Film Editor
Grissly's Millions (1945)
Film Editor
Utah (1945)
Film Editor
Mojave Firebrand (1944)
Film Editor
Tucson Raiders (1944)
Film Editor
Firebrands of Arizona (1944)
Film Editor
Code of the Prairie (1944)
Film Editor
Call of the Rockies (1944)
Film Editor
Stagecoach to Monterey (1944)
Film Editor
The Laramie Trail (1944)
Film Editor
Sheriff of Sundown (1944)
Film Editor
The Man from Thunder River (1943)
Film Editor
California Joe (1943)
Film Editor
Canyon City (1943)
Film Editor
Days of Old Cheyenne (1943)
Film Editor
Death Valley Manhunt (1943)
Film Editor
King of the Cowboys (1943)
Film Editor
Raiders of Sunset Pass (1943)
Film Editor
The Black Hills Express (1943)
Film Editor
Inside Information (1939)
Film Editor
Mystery of the White Room (1939)
Film Editor
The Witness Vanishes (1939)
Film Editor

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Brass Bottle, The (1964) -- (Movie Clip) You're Beginning To Twitch Leading man Tony Randall as architect Harold brings home the ancient bottle he's been warned is probably a fake, as a gift for his Egyptologist presumptive father-in-law (Edward Andrews) and wife (Ann Doran), who came home from Europe after hearing that he was engaged to their daughter (Barbara Eden), early in The Brass Bottle, 1964.
Brass Bottle, The (1964) -- (Movie Clip) He's A Big King Solomon Fan Now convinced that the antique bottle he bought as a gift for his fianceè’s parents must be a fake, architect Harold (Tony Randall) is planning to turn it into a lamp when Burl Ives (as “”Farkrash-el Aamash”) pops out, so he assumes it’s an elaborate trick by his Bohemian buddy Seymour, in The Brass Bottle, 1964.
Brass Bottle, The (1964) -- (Movie Clip) Also From The Caterer? In total panic because his unwanted genie (Burl Ives) turned his house into an Arabian pleasure palace before the dinner he planned with his fianceè (Barbara Eden) and his skeptical in-laws (Edward Andrews, Ann Doran), things get even worse for architect Harold (Tony Randall) when a dancing “houri” (Kamala Devi) appears, in The Brass Bottle, 1964.
Class of '44 (1973) -- (Movie Clip) You Can Pick Your Own Branch After the opening credits, the graduation party, pals Hermie (Gary Grimes, based on the writer Herman Raucher) and Oscy (Jerry Houser), and the rarely-seen screen debut of John Candy as Paulie, in director Paul Bogart’s follow-up to Summer Of ’42, Class Of ’44, 1973.
Class of '44 (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Send Me A Samurai Sword In an un-specified outer-borough of New York, Hermie (Gary Grimes) and Oscy (Jerry Houser), working at a loading dock in the summer before college, receive pal Benjie (Oliver Conant), who surprised everybody by enlisting in the Marines, in Class Of ’44, writer Herman Raucher’s kind-of sequel to the hit Summer Of ’42, 1971.
Class of '44 (1973) -- (Movie Clip) An Expert On The Works Of Melville Shooting on location at Princeton, Freshman Hermie (Gary Grimes, loosely based on the screenwriter Herman Raucher) looks for work at the student newspaper, Jeffrey Cohen the editor, Susan Marcus his assistant, and Deborah Winters as Julie, who’ll become his love interest, in the less-popular follow-up to Summer Of ’42, 1971, Class Of ’44, 1973.
That Funny Feeling (1965) -- (Movie Clip) That's Not What I Do For A Living The third and most elaborate chance collision between married stars Bobby Darin, as publisher Tom, and Sandra Dee as aspiring actress and housemaid Joan, who still haven’t realized she’s the one who cleans his apartment, Ben Lessy the bartender as they chat, in That Funny Feeling, 1965.
Skin Game (1971) -- (Movie Clip) Free Territory Or No Con artist Quincy (James Garner) and partner Jason (Louis Gossett), whom he sells as a slave before they abscond, in 1857 Kansas, debate whether to press their luck, and meet Ed Asner as nasty trader Plunkett, early in Skin Game, 1971, from a story by Richard Alan Simmons, of Columbo fame.
Skin Game (1971) -- (Movie Clip) God Loves You Con men Quincy and Jason (James Garner, Louis Gossett), who work a scam where one sells the other as a slave, arrive in a fictional Kansas town, 1857, where a vote on slavery is imminent, and meet Ginger (Susan Clark), who expresses noble intentions, in Skin Game, 1971.
Skin Game (1971) -- (Movie Clip) That's John Brown Himself! Two rival Kansans (Henry Jones, J. Pat O’Malley) bid up the price on slave Jason (Louis Gossett), to the delight of Quincy (James Garner) who poses as his owner but who is really his con-artist partner, when Royal Dano appears as the radical abolitionist John Brown, in Skin Game, 1971.
Skin Game (1971) -- (Movie Clip) Who'll Make An Offer? Because it’s James Garner and Louis Gossett, the viewer might guess it’s a scam, the former in the credit sequence having paraded the latter into a dusty Missouri town, 1857, George Tyne winning the bidding, with foul language, in the popular 1971 comic-Western Skin Game.
Mirage (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Someone Upstairs Playing God Manhattan executive Stillwell (Gregory Peck), mystified at his failing memory and people not recognizing him after a blackout and suicide in his building, meets George Kennedy in the basement, Neil Fitzgerald on security, and Jack Weston at his apartment, in Edward Dmytryk’s Mirage, 1965.

Bibliography