Edgar Peterson

Nacimiento : 1913-01-12,

Muerte : 1985-04-22

Películas

No Right to Kill
Producer
This is a special series of lost classic programs from the Golden Age of TV. The series has been restored by SabuCat Productions from the best archival film elements available in high definition, some of the programs have not been seen since they were originally broadcast. Volume One features 2 one-hour dramatic programs that feature John Cassavetes. Climax! ran for four years - This was an anthology series that presented a different story and different set of characters on each episode. It ran from 1954 to 1958 and featured Casino Royale of James Bond fame that lead to a feature film of the same titles. On August 9th, 1956 - they showed No Right to Kill directed by Buzz Kulik and starring John Cassavetes, Robert H. Harris, Joe Mantell and Terry Moore.
La escalera de caracol
Production Assistant
Una joven muda (McGuire) trabaja en una gran mansión como criada de una anciana enferma. Cuando un asesino en serie empieza a aterrorizar al vecindario, la señora se preocupa por la seguridad de su bella sirvienta. De este film de suspense se dijo que Hitchcock no lo hubiera hecho mejor.
Know Your Enemy: Japan
Writer
Frank Capra-directed propaganda film produced during World War II depicting the United States' new enemy: Japan.
Harvests for Tomorrow
Director
Documents farming practices in the New England states, showing the prosperity that fertile soils brought to hardworking farmers who cleared the hilly land. That fertile soil, rich in minerals, accumulated over the course of centuries covered in forests. Shows that generations of farmers have enriched themselves from these fertile soils without adequately caring for them. Failing farms, dilapidation and abandonment are shown to follow farming these depleted soils. "But it doesn't have to be this way," states a narrator in the character of an old Yankee. Application of lime and phosphorous fertilizers recommended by soil scientists are shown to restore and maintain soil fertility. Abundant harvests of hay are shown resulting from well-fertilized fields. Depicts pre-mechanized farming and logging practices, hand harvesting, and use of working animals.