Joseph Valentine


Biography

Filmography

 

Cinematography (Feature Film)

An American Girl: Chrissa Stands Strong (2009)
Camera Operator
Bride for Sale (1949)
Director of Photography
The Time of Your Life (1948)
Director of Photography
Sleep, My Love (1948)
Director of Photography
Rope (1948)
Director of Photography
Joan of Arc (1948)
Director of Photography
Possessed (1947)
Director of Photography
Heartbeat (1946)
Director of Photography
Lover Come Back (1946)
Director of Photography
So Goes My Love (1946)
Director of Photography
Magnificent Doll (1946)
Director of Photography
Tomorrow Is Forever (1946)
Director of Photography
Guest Wife (1945)
Director of Photography
Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
Director of Photography
Between Us Girls (1942)
Director of Photography
Saboteur (1942)
Director of Photography
Nice Girl? (1941)
Director of Photography
Keep 'Em Flying (1941)
Director of Photography
Appointment for Love (1941)
Director of Photography
The Wolf Man (1941)
Director of Photography
In the Navy (1941)
Director of Photography
Unfinished Business (1941)
Director of Photography
Trail of the Vigilantes (1940)
Director of Photography
It's a Date (1940)
Director of Photography
One Night in the Tropics (1940)
Director of Photography
The Boys from Syracuse (1940)
Photography
My Little Chickadee (1940)
Director of Photography
Spring Parade (1940)
Director of Photography
First Love (1939)
Director of Photography
Three Smart Girls Grow Up (1939)
Director of Photography
The Rage of Paris (1938)
Director of Photography
Mad About Music (1938)
Assistant Camera
Mad About Music (1938)
Director of Photography
That Certain Age (1938)
Director of Photography
Little Tough Guys in Society (1938)
Camera
Top of the Town (1937)
Photography
One Hundred Men and a Girl (1937)
Director of Photography
Wings over Honolulu (1937)
Photography
Merry-Go-Round of 1938 (1937)
Director of Photography
The Man I Marry (1936)
Photography
Three Smart Girls (1936)
Photography
Next Time We Love (1936)
Cinematographer
Two in a Crowd (1936)
Photography
The Moon's Our Home (1936)
Photography
Remember Last Night? (1935)
Cinematographer
Doubting Thomas (1935)
Photography
The Gay Deception (1935)
Photography
Alias Mary Dow (1935)
Cinematographer
Swell-Head (1935)
Photography
Student Tour (1934)
Photography
3 on a Honeymoon (1934)
Photography
Call It Luck (1934)
Photography
Wild Gold (1934)
Photography
A Woman's Man (1934)
Photography
Obey the Law (1933)
Photography
Jimmy and Sally (1933)
Photography
Take a Chance (1933)
Photography
State Fair (1933)
Photographer in Designer Moines
Myrt and Marge (1933)
Photography
What Price Innocence? (1933)
Photography
Man Hunt (1933)
Photography
Night of Terror (1933)
Camera
Bachelor's Affairs (1932)
Camera Operator
Are You There? (1931)
Photography
Crazy That Way (1930)
Director of Photography
Soup to Nuts (1930)
Director of Photography
Cheer Up and Smile (1930)
Director of Photography
Protection (1929)
Director of Photography
The Girl From Havana (1929)
Director of Photography
Speakeasy (1929)
Director of Photography
Prep and Pep (1928)
Director of Photography
The News Parade (1928)
Director of Photography
The Scarlet Honeymoon (1925)
Director of Photography
The Folly of Vanity (1924)
Director of Photography
My Husband's Wives (1924)
Director of Photography
Curlytop (1924)
Director of Photography
The Star Dust Trail (1924)
Director of Photography

Life Events

Photo Collections

That Certain Age - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
Here are a few photos taken behind-the-scenes during production of Universal Pictures' That Certain Age (1938), starring Deanna Durbin, Jackie Cooper, and Melvyn Douglas.

Videos

Movie Clip

Possessed (1947) -- (Movie Clip) We Fooled Her, Didn't We? Terrific twist from director Curtis Bernhardt, as Louise (Joan Crawford), the ex-nurse turned stepmother whom we know winds up in psychiatric care, has been in a jealous rage, when stepdaughter Carol (Geraldine Brooks), who has attracted interest from her true-love ex-boyfriend (Van Heflin) arrives, in Possessed, 1947.
Possessed (1947) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Used To Difficult Patients Still in flashback constructing the events leading to her breakdown, nurse Louise (Joan Crawford), just spurned by her love interest on her day off down by the lake, is waylaid by her affluent employer Graham (Raymond Massey), whose troubled wife she cares for, early in director Curtis Bernhardt’s Possessed, 1947.
Possessed (1947) -- (Movie Clip) Open, I Thought I'd Lost You Joining director Curtis Bernhardt’s intense opening, with some soundstage shots but also lots of downtown L-A and USC Medical Center, Joan Crawford as distraught nurse Louise has definite problems, in Possessed, 1947, also starring Van Heflin, from screenwriters Ranald MacDougal and Silvia Richards, and producer Jerry Wald.
It's A Date (1940) -- (Movie Cilp) Gypsy Lullaby Opening scenes, what looks like bad lip-sync turns out to be Deanna Durbin silently singing along with her mother on stage, the certainly dubbed Kay Francis, who then makes a speech, from the Joe Pasternak-produced It's A Date, 1940, also starring Walter Pidgeon.
It's A Date (1940) -- (Movie Clip) Your Lips Are So Bitter Clever bit from director William A. Seiter, Deanna Durbin as "Pam," with her tag-along boyfriend (Lewis Howard), then with the kids at the summer stock theater greeting her stage-star mother's friends (Samuel Hinds, S.Z. Sakall) in producer Joe Pasternak's It's A Date, 1940.
It's A Date (1940) -- (Movie Clip) Loch Lomond Standard fare for this Deanna Durbin vehicle, here playing aspiring star "Pam,' at her summer stock theater, performing the Scottish standard, thoroughly impressing Samuel Hinds and S.Z. "Cuddles" Sakall, the producer and playwright who made her mother a Broadway star, in It's A Date, 1940.
Rope (1948) -- (Movie Clip) Open, It's The Darkness The opening with the sole un-disguised edit in the picture, Alfred Hitchcock with his first Technicolor feature, the movie-with-no-cuts gimmick, stars John Dall and Farley Granger as New Yorkers Brandon and Philip finishing off their victim (Dick Hogan), in Rope, 1948, co-starring James Stewart.
Rope (1948) -- (Movie Clip) Do You Deserve Justice? From another of director Alfred Hitchcock’s disguised edits, Constance Collier with pianist David (Farley Granger) who with roommate Brandon (John Dall) has hidden murder victim David in the trunk, James Stewart as their old prep school teacher finally arriving, meeting Cedric Hardwicke, Joan Chandler, Douglas Dick and Edith Evanson as the maid, in Rope, 1948.
Rope (1948) -- (Movie Clip) I Don't Think You Appreciate Me Having murdered a friend for fun, New Yorker Brandon (John Dall) springs an idea on less confident David (Farley Granger), regarding the trunk that holds the body, with director Alfred Hitchcock’s first disguised edit in his movie made to look like a single take, the loosely Loeb & Leopold-based, Edith Evanson their maid, in Rope, 1948.
Saboteur (1942) -- (Movie Clip) You're Being Followed Barry (Robert Cummings), wrongly wanted and now on his own seeking the culprit in an act of wartime industrial sabotage, rides with a trucker (Murray Alper) and sees co-star Priscilla Lane, for the first time, on a billboard, early in Alfred Hitchcock’s Saboteur 1942.
Saboteur (1942) -- (Movie Clip) Here Come The Wolves California warrplane factory workers Barry (Robert Cummings) and Mason (Virgil Summers) encounter the mysterious Fry (Norman Lloyd), then a disaster, in the opening scene from Alfred Hitchcock's Saboteur 1942.
Wolf Man, The (1941) -- (Movie Clip) A Wolf And A Star Lon Chaney Jr. (as Larry Talbot) carries off the vapid Americanized playboy piece of his role, dropping in on English shop-girl Gwen (Evelyn Ankers), whom he's seen through his telescope, early in Universal's The Wolf Man, 1941.

Bibliography