Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

Samuel Michael Fuller (August 12, 1912 – October 30, 1997) was an American screenwriter, novelist and film director known for low-budget genre movies with controversial themes. He was born Samuel Michael Fuller in Worcester, Massachusetts, the son of Benjamin Rabinovitch, a Jewish immigrant from Russia, and Rebecca Baum, a Jewish immigrant from Poland. After immigrating to America, the family's surname was changed from Rabinovitch to "Fuller" possibly by inspiration of a Doctor who arrived in America on the Mayflower. At the age of 12, he began working in journalism as a newspaper copyboy. He became a crime reporter in New York City at age 17, working for the New York Evening Graphic. He broke the story of Jeanne Eagels' death. He wrote pulp novels and screenplays from the mid-1930s onwards. Fuller also became a screenplay ghostwriter but would never tell interviewers which screenplays that he ghost-wrote explaining "that's what a ghost writer is for".
5.81941
1979
7.3Pierrot le Fou
1965
4.9Cinématon
1978
10.0Where Is Musette?
1992
7.1The American Friend
1977
6.7The Big Red One
1980
7.0Carmel
2009
6.3Hammett
1982
5.9A Return to Salem's Lot
1987
6.6White Dog
1982
5.4The End of Violence
1997
6.2House of Bamboo
1955
5.8The Last Movie
1971
7.2Filmmakers in Action
2006
7.5La Vie de Bohème
1992
6.3Scene Missing
2012
3.0Slapstick of Another Kind
1982
6.3Sons
1990
5.8The Men Who Made the Movies: Samuel Fuller
2002
5.2Golem: The Petrified Garden
1993