Dillinger - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Dillinger"
Dillinger (1973)
Timing: 1:47 (107 min)
Dillinger - TMDB rating
6.555/10
100
Dillinger - Kinopoisk rating
6.996/10
790
Dillinger - IMDB rating
6.9/10
6400

Film crew

Director

Producer

Buzz Feitshans
Producer

Executive Producer

Photo Lawrence Gordon #20415Photo Lawrence Gordon #327628

Lawrence Gordon

Lawrence Gordon
Executive Producer
Photo Samuel Z. Arkoff #93096
Samuel Z. Arkoff
Executive Producer

Writer

Casting

Photo Fred Roos #11803
Fred Roos
Casting

Editor

Fred R. Feitshans Jr.
Editor

Art Direction

Trevor Williams
Art Direction

Stunts

Whitey Hughes
Stunts

Stunt Coordinator

Photo Terry Leonard #10913

Terry Leonard

Terry Leonard
Stunt Coordinator

Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

Tom Ellingwood
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Barry De Vorzon
Original Music Composer

Associate Producer

Robert Papazian
Associate Producer

Director of Photography

Jules Brenner
Director of Photography

Camera Operator

Jack L. Richards
Camera Operator
James Pergola
Camera Operator

Script Supervisor

Bonnie Prendergast
Script Supervisor

Hairstylist

Marlene Kolstad
Hairstylist

Still Photographer

Phil Segura
Still Photographer

Sound Mixer

Donald F. Johnson
Sound Mixer

Boom Operator

Kenneth Schwarz
Boom Operator

Gaffer

Colin J. Campbell
Gaffer

Assistant Director

Donald C. Klune
Assistant Director

What's left behind the scenes

  • J. Edgar Hoover (1895-1972), who served as Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, actively opposed the filming of this movie and demanded that the FBI be portrayed favorably in it. Shortly before his death, he wrote a disclaimer to be used in the film (it is heard after the end credits). The film shows Dillinger being killed outside the Biograph Theater as soon as he pulled out a gun. In reality, Dillinger did not pull out a gun that evening. The FBI decided simply to kill Dillinger, rather than attempt to take him alive. He ran and received six bullets in the back.
  • The idea that Pretty Boy Floyd (Charles Arthur Floyd, 1904-1934) was part of Dillinger's gang is based on a theory still debated by historians and Dillinger's biographers; according to it, Floyd participated in Dillinger's gang's last bank robbery in South Bend, Indiana in June 1934. No one present at the robbery was certain it was Floyd; there is an opinion that Joseph Negri, an associate of Baby Nelson (1908-1934), claimed that Pretty Boy Floyd was there to cover up his own presence and involvement in the robbery.
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