Liberty Pictures
Company typeFilm Production
IndustryEntertainment
Founded1930
FoundersM.H. Hoffman
Defunct1935
FateAcquired by Republic Pictures

Liberty Pictures was an American film production company of the 1930s. Part of Poverty Row, the company produced low-budget B pictures. It was one of two companies controlled by the producer M.H. Hoffman along with Allied Pictures.

The company produced its first film, Ex-Flame, loosely based on the Victorian novel East Lynne, in 1930. In 1935 the company was taken over by the larger Republic Pictures.[1] When absorbing the company, Republic adopted the symbolic motif of Liberty Pictures - the Liberty Bell ringing in Philadelphia. This merger constituted an attempt by Herbert Yates to rationalize Poverty Row and create a ninth[clarification needed] major studio.

Filmography

Lobby card for Take the Stand (1934)

References

  1. ^ Pitts p.216

Bibliography