
Director
Harry S. Webb
Born 1892 · Pennsylvania, USA
Harry S. Webb (October 15, 1892 – July 4, 1959) was an American film producer, director and screenwriter. He produced 100 films between 1924 and 1940. He also directed 55 films between 1924 and 1940. He was the brother of "B"-film producer and director Ira S. Webb and the husband of screenwriter Rose Gordon, who wrote many of his films. In 1933 Webb and Bernard B. Ray created Reliable Pictures Corporation with a studio at Beachwood and Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. Reliable produced and released many Westerns, starting with Girl Trouble (1933), until the company closed in 1937. Its final release was The Silver Trail.[1] Webb and Ray then started Metropolitan Pictures Corporation in 1938, which produced and released several films until 1940, its last being Pinto Canyon.[1] Webb then produced Westerns for Monogram Pictures. He was born in Pennsylvania and died in Hollywood, from a heart attack
Directed

The Isle of Sunken Gold
Director · 1927

Pioneer Days
Director · 1940

Terror of the Plains
Director · 1934

Fighting Hero
Director · 1934

The Pal from Texas
Director · 1939

The Sign of the Wolf
Director · 1931

The Live Wire
Director · 1935

Wolf Riders
Director · 1935

Beyond the Rio Grande
Director · 1930

Phantom of the Desert
Director · 1930

Tracy Rides
Director · 1935

Mesquite Buckaroo
Director · 1939

The Thunderbolt Strikes
Director · 1926

Starlight, the Untamed
Director · 1925
The Phantom of the North
Director · 1929

Ridin' Thru
Director · 1934

Pinto Rustlers
Director · 1936

West of Cheyenne
Director · 1931


