Rudolf "Rudi" Fehr, A.C.E. (July 6, 1911 – April 16, 1999) was a German-born, American film editor and studio executive. He had more than thirty credits as an editor of feature films including Key Largo (1946), Dial M for Murder (1954), and Prizzi's Honor (1985). He worked for more than forty years for the Warner Brothers film studio, where he was the Head of Post-production from 1955 through 1976. Fehr was instrumental in establishing the 1967 "sister city" connection between Los Angeles and Berlin, which he had fled in the 1930s. Description above from the Wikipedia article Rudi Fehr licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Dial M for Murder
(Editor)
Prizzi's Honor
(Editor)
I Confess
(Editor)
Key Largo
(Editor)
The Conspirators
(Editor)
Beyond the Forest
(Editor)
The Damned Don't Cry
(Editor)
All Through the Night
(Editor)
Rocky Mountain
(Editor)
Devotion
(Editor)
The Desert Song
(Producer)
Confession
(Assistant Editor)
Desperate Journey
(Editor)
Million Dollar Baby
(Editor)
The Voice of the Turtle
(Editor)
Between Two Worlds
(Editor)
Watch on the Rhine
(Editor)
A Stolen Life
(Editor)
House of Wax
(Editor)
The Invader
(Editor)
One from the Heart
(Editor)
Alice in Movieland
(Editor)
The Inspector General
(Editor)
Possessed
(Editor)
Land of the Pharaohs
(Supervising Editor)
Honeymoon for Three
(Editor)
The Great Mr. Nobody
(Editor)
Navy Blues
(Editor)
Humoresque
(Editor)
In Our Time
(Editor)
Nobody Lives Forever
(Editor)
Goodbye, My Fancy
(Editor)
Romance on the High Seas
(Editor)
My Love Came Back
(Editor)
Unsichtbare Gegner
(Co-Editor)
Le Tunnel
(Editor)
Riding Shotgun
(Editor)