Herbert I. Leeds(1900-1954)
- Director
- Editor
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Herbert I. Leeds was a journeyman film editor before turning director
in 1937. Many of his films were made for 20th Century-Fox, and his
training as an editor was evident in the efficiency and tight pacing of
his films. Although he started out making westerns, he soon turned to
mysteries and adventures. His war film, Manila Calling (1942) was not the
flag-waving, jingoistic propaganda piece typical of that era; while an
action film, it eschewed phony heroics (until the last reel, anyway) in
its story of a group of American soldiers and civilians trapped on
Luzon by the Japanese invasion of the Philippines. He also directed two
enjoyable entries in the underrated Lloyd Nolan "Michael Shayne" private
detective series. Unlike many B directors, Leeds' final films kept up
to the same quality as his early ones, and his next-to-last picture,
Bunco Squad (1950) is, despite its potboiler title, a solid, well-crafted and
well-acted little thriller.