David E. West

Películas

Préstame a tu bebé
Director of Photography
La empleada de una guardería utiliza a los bebés para chantajear a los hombres con los que ha pasado una noche. Un año más tarde, aparece en la casa de un abogado con el que se había acostado y le dice que el bebé que lleva es suyo. La joven chantajista le pide una fuerte suma de dinero a cambio de desaparecer de su vida, pero este hombre no resultará tan fácil de convencer...
Meat Loaf: In Search of Paradise
Cinematography
Meat Loaf, the legendary rocker, reveals surprising shades of himself -- and his internal demons -- as he sets out on an ambitious world tour.
The Eggplant Lady
Cinematography
Based on the First Sorrowful Mystery of the Rosary, The Agony in the Garden, The Eggplant Lady is a heartwarming story about a family’s decision to move to a bigger house in a better neighborhood and how the teen, Jamie, and the grandmother, Rosa, come together to face a situation neither can control. Rosa teaches Jamie the valuable lesson of Christ’s suffering in the garden of Gethsemani. The Eggplant Lady, featuring a recipe with a secret ingredient, tears and laughter, faith and family, will inspire and touch viewers of all ages.
Rendezvous
Director of Photography
A young, stunningly beautiful and mysterious woman, being chased by the killers of her mob-connected husband, has nowhere to run until she accidentally encounters a successful graphic designer.
Incognito
Director of Photography
A rape victim continues to be stalked by the man who attacked her. Her fiancé is no help, so her father hires a bodyguard to protect her.
Winner Takes All
Cinematography
Two rapper childhood friends turn to the quick and easy life of crime to support their needy parents. But after a foiled robbery, one of them is jailed while the other flees, changes his name, joins the military, and grows up to become a narcotics agent.
Peter and the Wolf
Director of Photography
Sergei Prokofiev's symphonic masterpiece, first performed in Russia in 1936, has been lauded not only for the spectacular musical score, but also for the story itself--of a young boy who outwits a wily wolf. George Daugherty brings this timeless tale to modern audiences by seamlessly weaving live-action with animation and music by the RCA Symphony Orchestra. The story opens as a grandfather (Lloyd Bridges) hosts his daughter (Kirstie Alley) and grandson (Ross Malinger from Sleepless in Seattle) during a visit to his country cottage. After lunch, the trio settles in as grandfather recounts "The Story" of Peter's adventures with a bird, cat, and dizzy duck on the outskirts "of a very dark forest." The film morphs into a clever cartoon designed by the legendary Chuck Jones (of Wile E. Coyote fame). The "story within a story" leaps to life while the accompanying musical instruments also emerge as playful personalities.