Slaughterhouse-Five - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Slaughterhouse-Five"
Slaughterhouse-Five (1972)
Timing: 1:40 (100 min)
Slaughterhouse-Five - TMDB rating
6.5/10
208
Slaughterhouse-Five - Kinopoisk rating
6.848/10
2156
Slaughterhouse-Five - IMDB rating
6.8/10
15000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Paul Monash
Producer

Executive Producer

Jennings Lang
Executive Producer

Casting

Marion Dougherty
Casting

Editor

Art Direction

Alexander Golitzen
Art Direction
George C. Webb
Art Direction

Production Design

Photo Henry Bumstead #72282

Henry Bumstead

Henry Bumstead
Production Design

Set Decoration

John McCarthy Jr.
Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

John Chambers
Makeup Artist
Mark Reedall
Makeup Artist

Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Dick Vorisek
Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Unit Production Manager

Lloyd Anderson
Unit Production Manager
Ernest B. Wehmeyer
Unit Production Manager

Director of Photography

Musician

Sound Effects Editor

Vincent Connelly
Sound Effects Editor

Script Supervisor

Charlsie Bryant
Script Supervisor

Screenplay

Novel

Assistant Editor

Stephen A. Rotter
Assistant Editor

Assistant Director

Ray Gosnell Jr.
Assistant Director

Music Editor

John Strauss
Music Editor

Sound

James R. Alexander
Sound
Milan Novotný
Sound

Matte Painter

Albert Whitlock
Matte Painter

Technical Advisor

Enzo A. Martinelli
Technical Advisor
Andrew Kazdin
Technical Advisor

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film was shot in the United States in the state of Minnesota and in Czechoslovakia in Prague.
  • The famous phrase “And so it goes” appears over 100 times in Kurt Vonnegut Jr.'s (1922-2007) novel (1969), but is not spoken at all in this film adaptation.
  • Kurt Vonnegut Jr., the author of the literary source material, was a prisoner of war during World War II. He was captured on December 22, 1944, during the Battle of the Bulge, while serving as a scout in the 106th Infantry Division. The same fate befalls the book's protagonist, who is sent to a concentration camp by the Germans. Among other things, Vonnegut survived the bombing of Dresden and also described it in his novel.
  • Shortly before the bombing of Dresden, a Howard Campbell Jr. addresses the American prisoners of war. In 1961, Vonnegut wrote the novel “Mother Night,” centering around this character, and later Kit Gordon filmed a movie (1996) based on it starring Nick Nolte.
  • When Billy’s mother visits him in the hospital, she talks about what he experienced in Dresden with Eliot Rosewater. This is the hero of Vonnegut’s 1965 novel “God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater, or Pearls Before Swine,” who was later played by Ken Hudson Campbell in Alan Rudolph’s comedy “Breakfast of Champions” (1999).
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