Guido Seeber

Cinematographer, Film cinematographer

1879 – 1940

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Who was Guido Seeber?

Guido Seeber was a German cinematographer and pioneer of early cinema.

Seeber's father, Clemens, was a photographer and therefore Seeber had experience with photography from an early age. In the summer of 1896, he saw the first films of the Lumière Brothers and became fascinated by this new technology. He bought a film camera and devoted himself to the development of cinematography and of sound films.

In 1908 he became technical manager of the film company Deutsche Bioscop and in 1909 directed his first film. His pioneering work as a cinematographer from this time on laid the foundations which other cameramen of German silent film such as Karl Freund, Fritz Arno Wagner and Carl Hoffman were able to build.

In addition to his technical talents with the camera, his use of perspective and skillful contrasts between light and dark are noteworthy. His main collaborators were the directors Urban Gad, Lupu Pick, Georg Wilhelm Pabst und Paul Wegener and among his most important accomplishments are the shots of the Doppelgänger in Wegener's Der Student von Prag of 1913 and the moving camera shots in the films of Lupu Pick, particularly Sylvester, which can be seen as anticipating the so-called "unchained camera" of Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau's The Last Laugh.

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Born
Jun 22, 1879
Chemnitz
Also known as
  • Friedrich Konrad Guido Seeber
Parents
Spouses
Nationality
  • Germany
Profession
Died
Jul 2, 1940
Berlin

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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