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  1. Tall: The American Skyscraper and Louis Sullivan is a 2006 documentary film by Manfred Kirchheimer that attempts to tell the story of how Louis Sullivan designed skyscrapers. The film begins by placing the viewer in late 19th century Chicago just after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.

    • Streetwise Films
    • Sigmund Abeles, Ann Chernow, Paul Marcus, James Reed
  2. 17 mar 2006 · Tall: The American Skyscraper and Louis Sullivan: Directed by Manfred Kirchheimer. With Dylan Baker. The development of the American skyscraper, starting in the late 19th century, in Chicago and then New York, centers on the conflict between architects Daniel Burnham and Louis Sullivan.

    • (27)
    • Documentary
    • Manfred Kirchheimer
    • 2006-03-17
  3. 17 gen 2018 · Directed by Manfred Kirchheimer. Documentary. Not Rated. 1h 19m. By A.O. Scott. Jan. 17, 2018. “Tall” is a compact history of the American skyscraper, an unassuming (though hardly...

    • Manfred Kirchheimer
    • A.O. Scott
    • 79 min
  4. 14 gen 2005 · Film. Tall: The American Skyscraper and Louis Sullivan. by Fred Camper January 14, 2005. Manfred Kirchheimer’s 2006 video documentary tells the story of Louis Sullivan, Frank...

    • Fred Camper
  5. 19 gen 2018 · Tall: The American Skyscraper and Louis Sullivan - Metacritic. Summary This film tells the story of the unstoppable rise of the skyscrapers. Starting in 1869, in New York and Chicago, elevators, steel, and electricity combined to create a frenzy of tall and taller buildings.

    • (4)
    • Manfred Kirchheimer
    • Not Rated
    • Dylan Baker
  6. Tall: The American Skyscraper and Louis Sullivan. Tracing the experiments of the early skyscraper architects, especially Louis Sullivan, the Chicago architect who pioneered a new...

    • (5)
    • Documentary
  7. Directed by. Manfred Kirchheimer. United States, 2006. Documentary. 82. Synopsis. This film tells the story of the unstoppable rise of the skyscrapers. Starting in 1869, in New York and Chicago, elevators, steel, and electricity combined to create a frenzy of tall and taller buildings.