Harold Wenstrom


Biography

Filmography

 

Cinematography (Feature Film)

Hollywood Bound (1946)
Photographer for "Ferry-Go-Round"
Annie Oakley (1935)
Photography
Laddie (1935)
Photography
Powdersmoke Range (1935)
Photography
The Arizonian (1935)
Photography
Gift of Gab (1934)
Photography
Keep 'Em Rolling (1934)
Photography
Their Big Moment (1934)
Photography
Wednesday's Child (1934)
Photography
Red Morning (1934)
Photography
The Lost Patrol (1934)
Director of Photography
What--No Beer? (1933)
Photography
Huddle (1932)
Photography
Hell Divers (1932)
Photography
Speak Easily (1932)
Photography
Fast Life (1932)
Photography
The Secret Six (1931)
Photography
Min and Bill (1930)
Director of Photography
The Big House (1930)
Photography
Hazardous Valley (1927)
Director of Photography
Born To Battle (1927)
Director of Photography
The Midnight Watch (1927)
Director of Photography
The Lady in Ermine (1927)
Director of Photography
Born To Battle (1926)
Director of Photography
Syncopating Sue (1926)
Director of Photography
Into Her Kingdom (1926)
Director of Photography
Zander The Great (1925)
Director of Photography
The Great White Way (1924)
Director of Photography
When Knighthood Was in Flower (1923)
Director of Photography
The Go-Getter (1923)
Director of Photography
Adam and Eva (1923)
Director of Photography
Under the Red Robe (1923)
Director of Photography
The Face in the Fog (1922)
Director of Photography
The Beauty Shop (1922)
Director of Photography
The Young Diana (1922)
Director of Photography
Proxies (1921)
Director of Photography
The Wild Goose (1921)
Director of Photography
The Saphead (1920)
Camera
The Best of Luck (1920)
Camera

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Big House, The (1930) -- (Movie Clip) Mushrooms All Over It Director George Hill capturing more of the remarkable scale of the MGM sets in another famous scene, in the mess hall, Butch (Wallace Beery) sowing discontent, the warden (Lewis Stone) intervening, and new inmate Kent (Robert Montgomery) timidly foiling a plot, in The Big House, 1930.
Big House, The (1930) -- (Movie Clip) You're Too Nice A Kid More of MGM’s massive interior sets, derived partly from writer Frances Marion’s visit to San Quentin, our first trip to the yard with new inmate Kent (Robert Montgomery), with the boys playing what looks like a standard trick, DeWitt Jennings the head screw, in The Big House, 1930.
Big House, The (1930) -- (Movie Cilp) First Time In Prison? Dramatic opening, featuring a model prison, into which Kent (Robert Mongtomery) is incarcerated in convincing manner, from MGM's The Big House , 1930, also starring Wallace Beery and Chester Morris.
Secret Six, The (1931) -- (Movie Clip) I Ain't Got The Jack Novice gangster Louis (Wallace Beery), follows the lead from Johnny (Ralph Bellamy), putting the squeeze on a bar owner (Hector Sarno) when rival Eddie (Louis Natheaux) arrives, and MGM looks like Warner Bros., in The Secret Six, 1931, featuring Clark Gable and Jean Harlow.
Secret Six, The (1931) -- (Movie Clip) She's A Good Worker Rising gang moll Anne (Jean Harlow) sweet talking reporters Hank (John Mack Brown) and Carl (Clark Gable), on behalf of mobster Louis "Slaughterhouse" Scorpio (Wallace Beery), who's in the process of getting cleared of bumping off a rival, in MGM's The Secret Six, 1931.
Secret Six, The (1931) -- (Movie Clip) You Seem All Broken Up Mob lawyer Newton (Lewis Stone) turns in a stooge, reporters Carl and Hank (Clark Gable, John Mack Brown) arrive, Louis (Wallace Beery) fakes grief, victim's girlfriend (Marjorie Rambeau) throws a fit and shopgirl Anne (Jean Harlow) speaks up, in MGM's gangster mash-up The Secret Six, 1931.
Lost Patrol, The (1934) -- (Movie Clip) Mesopotamia, 1917 Murder, as much by Max Steiner's oppressive (and Academy Award nominated) score as by unseen Arab gunmen, in the opening scene from John Ford's The Lost Patrol, 1934, starring Victor McLaglen.
Lost Patrol, The (1934) -- (Movie Clip) I Could See From Here To Bloomsbury The Sergeant (Victor McLaglen) holds a strategy session with the whole squad, leading to cheerful Hale (Billy Bevan) volunteering to climb a tree, in John Ford's The Lost Patrol, 1934.
Lost Patrol, The (1934) -- (Movie Clip) A Mohammedan Mosque The squad, led by "The Sergeant" (Victor McLaglen) at the oasis, in order, Brandon Hurst, Sammy Stein, Reginald Denny, J.M. Kerrigan, Boris Karloff, Douglas Watson, Paul Hanson, Alan Hale, in John Ford's The Lost Patrol, 1934.
Arizonian, The (1935) -- (Movie Clip) Sorry To Interfere McCloskey and Keeler (Ray Mayer, Joseph Sauers) and co. hold up the Yuma stage, but only to bring Kitty (Margot Grahame) back to their employer, the crooked sheriff, whom she’s fleeing, when the leading man (Richard Dix) introduces himself, in The Arizonian, 1935.
Arizonian, The (1935) -- (Movie Clip) Got Any Other Alibis? The band led by Mccloskey (Ray Mayer) is shooting up Silver City so the frustrated mayor (Francis Ford) installs visitor Clay (Richard Dix) as marshal, only to be undermined when the sitting sheriff (Louis Calhern) backs the bad guys in court, in The Arizonian, 1935.
Big House, The (1930) -- (Movie Cilp) He's Only Stunned Rumblings of Monty Python in Frances Marion's script, as Kent (Robert Montgomery) meets cell-mates Butch (Wallace Beery) and Morgan (Chester Morris), in The Big House, 1930, directed by Marion's husband George Hill.

Bibliography