Yale alumnus Hall Bartlett set up his own film production company in 1952. His first feature film, Navajo, was a well-received contemporary docudrama, filmed on location at a Southwestern Navajo reservation. Bartlett himself appeared in the film as a white schoolteacher. His next project was Crazylegs (1953), a romanticized biopic of gridiron star Elroy "Crazylegs" Hirsch (played by Hirsch himself). Hirsch went on to co-star in the next Hall Bartlett Production, Unchained, another semi-documentary, this one set at a progressive California correctional institution. Bartlett co-directed his next film, 1957's Drango, and that same year wrote and directed the embryonic disaster-in-the-air film Zero Hour (again with "Crazylegs" Hirsch in the cast). After a decade's worth of virtuosity, Bartlett settled into conventional filmmaking in the 1960s. In 1973, he scored a box-office success with his cinemazation of the best-selling novel Jonathan Livingston Seagull. From 1966 through 1971, Hall Bartlett was married to actress Rhonda Fleming, who, intriguingly enough, never appeared in any of her husband's films.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Love Is Forever
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1983 | |||
|
The Children of Sanchez
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1978 | |||
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Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1973 | |||
|
Sandpit Generals
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1970 | |||
|
Changes
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1969 | |||
|
Sol Madrid
Producer |
1968 | |||
|
A Global Affair
Producer |
1963 | |||
|
The Caretakers
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1963 | |||
|
All the Young Men
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1960 | |||
|
Drango
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1957 | |||
|
Zero Hour
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1957 | |||
|
Unchained
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
1955 | |||
|
Crazylegs
Producer, Screenwriter |
1953 | |||
|
Crazylegs, All American
Producer, Screenwriter, Songwriter |
1953 | |||
|
The Navajo
Actor, Producer |
1952 | |||
|
The Wild Blue Yonder
Actor |
1951 | |||
|
The Paleface
Actor |
1948 |
