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Linwood Dunn : ウィキペディア英語版
Linwood G. Dunn

Linwood G. Dunn, A.S.C. (December 27, 1904, Brooklyn, New York – May 20, 1998, Los Angeles, California) was a pioneer of visual special effects in motion pictures and inventor of related technology. Dunn worked on many films and TV series including the original 1933 ''King Kong'' (1933), ''Citizen Kane'' (1941), and ''Star Trek'' (1966–69).
==Career==
Dunn's career began by about 1923 when he worked as a projectionist for the American Motion Picture Picture Corp. Following a relative to Hollywood, he was hired as an assistant by the Pathé company in 1925. Early films and serials he worked on as a cameraman were ''The Green Archer'' (1925), ''Snowed In'' (1926), ''Hawk of the Hills'' (1927), ''Queen of the Northwoods'' (1929), ''Flight'' (1929, Frank Capra's first sound film), ''Ringside'' (1929), ''The Case of Sergeant Grischa'' (1930), ''Danger Lights'' (1930), an early widescreen film, and ''Cimarron'' (1931), an Academy Award-winner for Best Picture.

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