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Before leaving Hollywood for Europe in 1951, after the problematic production "The Crimson Pirate" for Warner Bros., his third and last film with Lancaster, Siodmak had directed some of the era's best film noirs, the most of any director who worked in that style, twelve in all. But his identification with film noir, generally unpopular with American audiences, may have been more of a curse than a blessing. He often expressed his desire to make pictures "of a different type and background" than the ones he had been making for ten years. Nevertheless, he ended his Universal contract with one last noir, the disappointing "Deported," (1951) which he filmed partly abroad (Siodmak was among the first refugee directors to return to Europe to make American films). Those "different types" of films he had made: "The Great Sinner" (1949) for MGM; "Time Out of Mind" (1947) for Universal (which Siodmak also produced); "The Whistle at Eaton Falls" (1951) for Columbia--all proved ill suited to his noir sensibilities (although "The Crimson Pirate," despite the difficult production, was a surprising and pleasant departure). The five months he collaborated with Budd Schulberg on a screenplay tentatively titled "A Stone in the River Hudson," which later became "On the Waterfront," was a major disappointment too for Siodmak. So much so, in 1954 he sued producer Sam Spiegel for copyright infringement. Siodmak was awarded $100,000, but no screen credit. To this day his contribution to the original screenplay has never been acknowledged. His return to Hollywood film-making in 1967 to make the wide-screen western "Custer of the West" was yet another disappointment. Siodmak fared better in Europe, especially with the British film "The Rough and the Smooth" (1959), another noir, but much meaner and gloomier than anything he had made in America. He ended his career with a six-hour, two-part toga and chariot epic, "Der Kampf um Rom" (1968), oddly more campy (perhaps intentionally, one hopes) than "Cobra Woman" had been. Like the Roman Empire, it too fell, but more quickly. There was a brief and profitable foray into television in Great Britain with the O.S.S. series in the late 1950s. Siodmak was last seen publicly in an interview for Swiss television at his home in Ascona in 1971. He died alone in 1973, seven weeks after his wife's death.
Filmography
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