Portrait of Gary Graver

Gary Graver

Camera

Biography

Gary Foss Graver (July 20, 1938 – November 16, 2006) was an American film director, editor, screenwriter and cinematographer. He was a prolific filmmaker, working in various roles on over 300 films, but is best known as Orson Welles' final cinematographer, working over a period of six years on Welles' epic film The Other Side of the Wind which was released in 2018, 48 years after it was started. Graver began his career in the late 1960s as a cinematographer and editor of various B-movies, including several films by Roger Corman, before providing additional camerawork on John Cassavetes's A Woman Under the Influence (1974). He continued to serve as the cinematographer of numerous horror films from the late 1970s and through the 1980s, including The Toolbox Murders (1978), Trick or Treats (1982), which he also wrote, edited, and directed; Mortuary (1983), They're Playing with Fire (1984), and Twisted Nightmare (1988). Under the pseudonym of Robert McCallum, Graver was also a prolific director of adult films, working as a cinematographer and director on 135 features. Description above from the Wikipedia article Gary Graver, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Born: July 20, 1938

Place of Birth: Portland, Oregon, USA

Filmography

2018
The Other Side of the Wind

as Documentary Filmmaker

2018
They'll Love Me When I'm Dead

as Self (archive footage)

2006
1998
Invisible Dad

as Forger

1997
Operation Cobra

as Conspirator

1996
Invisible Mom

as Psych Patient

1996
Masseuse

as Bob

1992
Roots of Evil

as Vinnie (uncredited)

1990
Bad Girls from Mars

as Camera Guy

1982
Society Affairs

as Guy on Pay Phone

1980
Co-Ed Fever

as waiter (uncredited)

1980
Garage Girls

as Man in Beret (uncredited)

1979
The Ecstasy Girls

as Slate Operator

1974
1973
F for Fake

as Self

1973
The Dirty Dolls

as Charlie

1973
And When She Was Bad...

as Fire Engine Rider / Man in Alley (uncredited)

1970
Horror of the Blood Monsters

as Earthly Vampire (uncredited)

1969