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  1. Frank Borzage. Director. en. Los piratas del mar Caribe (1945) Billy el niño (1941) Adiós a las armas (1932) Si no encuentras lo que buscas, inténtalo con el buscador global. Filmaffinity es una web de votación y recomendación personalizada de películas y series, una red social y diario del cine y las series con votaciones, listas y ...

  2. Frank Borzage nació en Salt Lake City, Utah, el 23 de abril de 1893. Su madre era de origen suizo-alemán y su padre era italiano. Frank inició sus estudios primarios pero los abandonaría pronto, y con tan sólo 12 años comenzó a trabajar en la mina de Silver King. A partir de ese momento Frank trabajará en distintos gremios hasta que en ...

  3. 19 de abr. de 2024 · Frank Borzage (born April 23, 1893, Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S.—died June 19, 1962, Los Angeles, California) was an American motion-picture director and producer noted for his romantic transcendentalism and technically impeccable filmmaking. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) He was the son of a master stonemason.

  4. 9 de feb. de 2024 · Language. Label. Description. Also known as. English. Frank Borzage. American film director and actor (1894-1962)

  5. 27 de abr. de 2021 · Born April 23, 1894, in Salt Lake City, Utah, Frank Borzage wanted to be in entertainment since he was a kid. That takes money, so Borzage worked odd jobs in mines and on cooking lines to pay his way. Work and travel with various theater companies got Borzage out of Utah and eventually landed him in Denver, where he called on impresario Gilmor ...

  6. 17 de abr. de 2024 · Richard Brody on the director Frank Borzage and his 1933 film “Man’s Castle,” which will screen at the Museum of Modern Art as part of a retrospective.

  7. www.filmcomment.com › article › the-sanctum-santorumFrank Borzage - Film Comment

    In his lovingly researched Frank Borzage —Sarastro à Hollywood (an act of true literary devotion that provides all of the biographical information for this article), Hervé Dumont cites Borzage’s development of intimate scenes “to the detriment of the action” as the basis of contemporary objections to The River, the director’s fearsome 1929 masterpiece that was caught in the mad ...