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David Friedman

Filmography:
- 2001 Maniacs 2005
- She Freak 2005
- Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat 2002
- Teenage Tupelo 1995
- Blonde Heat 1985
- Matinee Idol 1984
- Alexandra 1983
- The Budding of Brie 1980
- The Nibblers 1979
- Seven Into Snowy 1977
- Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS 1975
- Johnny Firecloud 1975
- Bummer! 1973
- That's Sexploitation 1973
- The Erotic Adventures of Zorro 1972
- The Adult Version of Jekyll & Hide 1972
- Siegfried-und-das-sagenhafte Liebesleben der Nibelungen 1971
- Red, White and Blue 1971
- Trader Hornee 1970
- Starlet! 1969
- Thar She Blows! 1969
- The Ramrodder 1969
- A Sweet Sickness 1968
- Space-Thing 1968
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- Brand of Shame 1968
- The Head Lady 1968
- The Acid Eaters 1968
- The Lustful Turk 1968
- The Big Snatch 1968
- Brick Doll House 1967
- A Smell of Honey, a Swallow of Brine 1966
- The Notorious Daughter of Fanny Hill 1966
- But Charlie, I Never Played Volleyball! 1966
- Pussy Galore 1965
- Color Me Blood Red 1965
- The Defilers 1965
- Two Thousand Maniacs! 1964
- Scum of the Earth 1963
- Bell, Bare and Beautiful 1963
- Goldilocks and the Three Bares 1963
- Blood Feast 1963
- Boin-n-g 1963
- Nature's Playmates 1962
- Daughter of the Sun 1962
- The Adventures of Lucky Pierre 1961
- Cannibal Island 1956
- A Night at the Follies 1956
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INTERVIEW WITH David Friedman by Eric S. Eichelberger
DF:
Well, She-Freak was a real labor of love, so to speak. As you all know,
I traveled with carnivals when I was a kid. And I have always, in fact,
I been in the carnival business since I retired when I had to finally
quit a couple years ago when I couldn’t sing anymore. But when I
was about nine years old, I saw a picture made by Tod Browning called
Freaks. And I think that picture left the most impression on me of any
movie I’d ever seen out of all the years I’ve been going to
movies. And I also thought, “Gee, I’d like to make this.”
Of course by that time, I made She-Freak in 1967. There weren’t
any more human oddities around so we had to gaff ‘em all. And of
course if you all remember, those of you who saw the original Tod Browning
film, it took place on a European circus. It was very dark, very lugubrious.
Here I am making a picture on a California carnival which was bright with
a lot of color and everything else. But it was basically my good friend,
the reviewer on the Los Angeles Times said, Nevermind that it’s
a direct steal from Tod Browning’s picture it’s a surprisingly
good little picture. And I’ve always kinda liked the picture. This
ladies and gentleman is my great niece Micah Everett. My eyes and ears.
I’m almost blind and I don’t hear so well. But if any of you
have any questions…
Eric: What’s
the best way to get money to make exploit movies?
DF: The best way, is the way I did it. First of all, I had some money.
See, I made my money the old-fashioned way – I stole it. We financed
our pictures, basically through cash flow from other pictures. You wanna
know the three magic words? If you know these three words, you’ll
always have money. You wanna know? “Stick ‘em up!”
Eric: Can you talk
about the music you put in your films?
DF: Most of the movies in my pictures were original. And were written
by my friend and line producer, William Adam Castleman, Billy Castleman,
Billy Allen. The deal was these original scores were all recorded with
pretty good orchestras. Billy was partnered with Bay Luce with a music
company. Billy May the band leader, if you remember him with Lou Parker,
and the deal was that they wrote the music for the pictures and I could
use them in the feature but they retain the publishing rights. Which meant
that they could sell those scores for other movies for industrials, for
television shows, or whatever. But I always had wound up with the first
use of an original score and, I know that Bill tells me that from time
to time he still gets checks from ASCAP for the music in Trader Hornee
and in Johnny Firecloud etc, etc. Whether any of them have been publicly
released on disc, I don’t think so. But Bill still retains the publishing
rights to all the movies, most all of my pictures. Every one of these
pictures had an original story.

Eric: When the movies
were first screened what was the audience reaction?
DF: Well, one of the beautiful things about being in the exploitation
business, back in my days, and something that a lot of young filmmakers
today will never enjoy because a lot of the pictures that are being made
today, the cheaper pictures, they don’t ever play theaters. There’s
no room for them in theaters anymore. They go straight to video. Then
go to cable, if they’re lucky. But being in the exploitation business,
to me the great thrill wasn’t particularly in making the pictures.
As a matter of fact, I wrote most of the pictures that I made. I didn’t
particularly dig hanging around the set. But my big thrill was after that
picture was made standing in front of the theater and watching the people
come in and go out and if they liked the picture, they told ya. And that
was the big thing I say that people like Bob Cresse, Don Davis and Harry
Novak, and the rest of us could all enjoy watching our pictures playing
in a theater and getting the reaction there. Sure, when you were making
a nudie cutie it was so automatic. There was a chain of theaters which
Dan, Sonny and I started called Pussycat theatres. We put a picture in
Pussycat Theatres it was like, you put the film in one end, turned the
crank and money came out the other end. It was a natural. The chain grew
to the point where there were 42 Pussycat Theatres in the state of California.
And all you had to do was play the Pussycat circuit, and you had all your
money back and a profit if you never played another theater. So it was
a pretty automatic thing. Surprisingly in that business, with the nudie
cuties, the customers would tell the popcorn guy or the manager, the ticket
taker, whether they liked the picture or not and they knew a lot about
that. This guy named Sully Cullen ran a little theatre right here on sunset
and western. You guys may remember the Sunset Theater It was a Pussycat
theater. And Sully was great about stopping people – “How’d
you like the picture? How’d you like the picture?” One day
some guy walked out, bought some popcorn, after he’d seen the picture,
was going out eating the popcorn. Sully said, “How’d you like
the picture?” The guy threw the popcorn at him. He obviously didn’t
like the picture. Believe it or not, you had a pretty good reaction. The
greatest reaction to your movie is what they do at the box office. Because
after that first performance, you know then and there if it’s good
or bad.
Eric: What are your
thoughts on the remakes of these older films like 2001 Maniacs?
DF: Two young men contacted me four years ago that they wanted to remake
2001 Maniacs. Well, it involved more than myself. It involved Herschel
Gordon Lewis. It involved Mike Grainy who runs a company called Something
Weird Videos which I think you all know. And another gentleman, named
Jimmy Maslin. And I said, Hey, this is great. This is the one picture
that is viable for a remake. Its Two thousand Maniacs! because it’s
a classic story of north versus the south. Well, Herschell, he wasn’t
enthused. He wanted to direct it. But he sent me a script and I loved
it. Because in the original, most of the people that got taken out by
the maniacs were nice people. In this picture, there were some people
that you hated and you were glad to see them get offed. I loved the script.
Herschell didn’t like the script. Mike Grainy was like, “yeah,
whatever, anyway.” It took ‘em, two and half three years they
did get started one time when they got the money. They opened offices
all on the Rawley lot right across the street from Paramount. And a guy
gave them an initial deposit and a good chunk of change and then disappeared.
And they had to shut it down. Finally, the money came in. The picture
was budgeted at a million and a quarter and they had the million and the
quarter. They paid for the remake rights which was split between the four
of us. Everything was...it was almost a year ago which they started shooting
in a little town called Lumpkin, Georgia, 150 miles south of where we
lived. So Michael drive me there and we spent a couple of days on the
set. Robert Englund is playing the mayor. And a nice cast of a lot of
TV players. Very cute young little girls. But as I said today, I saw it
and I’m just totally delighted that it is very very good. I hope
it’ll be released in theaters about the time of the spring break
2005. And I guarantee that all of you if you see it will love the picture.
They finally made a modern version of an old fashioned movie but kept
the joke intact. And that was what was very gratifying. About two years
ago, Herschell and I were invited to the film festival at San Sebastian,
Spain. And in one night we screened Bloodfeast, Two Thousand Maniacs!
and Color Me Blood Red. And here was an audience that none of them spoke
English. We had to run subtitles with a digital thing under the screen.
Of course when they saw the horrible acting, they started laughing. Even
though they didn’t understand English. And the audience breaks up.
After the screening, when Herschell and I get on the stage, I said, “At
last, we finally got an audience who got it.” It’s kinda gratifying.
In fact its very flattering that after all these years propagating some
of the worst movie trash in history that they recognized because of a
new technology called DVD and video. And you find a whole new gallery
of fans, so to speak. When it came to exploitation films, the old exploitation
films like Dwain Esper who made Marijuana Narcotic and Louis Sonny. It
was more than just showing a movie. They always had something in the lobby.
Old man Sonny had a crime show called “Capital Punishment”
and he’d go from town to town, and he’d sell a postcard showing
him and Rory Garner, the man he captured, in 1921, the most wanted man
in America. And he had a jail cell and he put that, set that up in the
lobby, find the town drunk and
put him in striped costume and handed him two dollars and he’d sit
there all day. “This is what a jail cell looks like.” And
I know when Dwain Esper bought the rights to Freaks from Mrs. Browning.
He re-titled it Forbidden Love. The love was between the midget and the
lady Aerialist over by Kunova. He got a whole lobby full of human oddities,
circus sideshow people and put ‘em in the lobby of the theater.
So the whole gimmick was you gave them more than a picture, you gave them
a whole show. How many of you people remember a picture called Poor White
Trash? My grips who made that picture was a fellow Alabaman. My kinda
drive-in and another drive-in in New Orleans. Many years ago he made a
picture called Bayou about the Cajuns. And United Artists released the
picture and it went nowhere; nobody came to see it. And at the end of
5 years, 7 years contract, Mike takes it back; comes up with the greatest
campaign in the world for Poor White Trash. Makes a whole trailer with
him and his back to the audience, and says, “I am the producer of
Poor White Trash. Due to the abnormal material of this picture, we cannot
show you any scenes. However, armed guards will be at the box office to
make sure that no one under the age of eighteen appear and you must sign
this affidavit that you’re eighteen.” And he hired some gazoonies.
He put guns on them. He sent him around with a paper that says, “I
am eighteen.” Half the people who went to see the picture couldn’t
write anyway. They’d sign it with an X. He went through the United
States like Grant took Richmond. I mean, it was unbelievable. And the
whole thing was this word: abnormal. And I said, Mike, you got the guts
of a burglar. And he said, “Dave, they wanna see a picture, they
can see it on television.” He said, “You gotta give them a
show.” He said, “But I gave them a show even before they got
in to see the picture.” That was what Poor White Trash was. As I
said, he had these guys out in front; you gotta sign this affidavit, carrying
a 44. People thought they were going to see something. You could have
played this picture at a Sunday school picnic. I’ll tell you one
story. I don’t know if any of you have seen a picture I made called
Starlet. This was the first
adult movie about adult movie industry. This young girl tried out for
it and she gave me a screen test. So I’m writing this script and
once in a while I get a little evil. But uh, in high school and college,
I read a lot of Shakespeare. In College Theater, I played Shakespeare.
So at any rate, I gave her Portia’s speech from The Merchant of
Venice which is eighteen pages long but it ran three pages in the script.
“Take thee not a pound of flesh but shed not a drop of blood...”
It goes on and on and on. So a little girl named Dee Lockwood. She was,
I guess in high school had been in a couple of plays, she had other attributes.
But we get to shoot this thing. We put her in a robe, put up a piece of
scenery, and she starts reading this thing, word for word perfectly. Dick
Kanter who was directing the picture looks at me, I look at him. The sound
guy says, “Wow.” She goes through the whole three pages and
doesn’t miss a word. So I said, “Gee, that was wonderful.
Can we punch in for the close up?” She picked it up right up and
did another two minutes. I said, “Okay, can I get a reverse on it.
Pick it up.” She says yeah. She gets through and everybody in the
crew gives her a hand. She walks over to me and says, “Mr. Freidman,
you write the most beautiful dialogue.” As a matter of fact, when
I started She-Freak I get a call from Sam Markoff. Whom you may remember,
headed a company called AIP. Sam calls me over and says, “Hey, I
hear you’re starting a carnival picture.” I said, “Yeah.”
He says, “Well don’t make it as bloody as that Bloodfeast
and AIP will distribute it.” So there wasn’t that much blood
in it other than the screwdriver through the hand and of course the end
of it. And I show it to Sam and he said, “Why didn’t you have
more blood and guts into it?” So from then on I never listened to
anyone.
Eric: Do any of your pictures stand
out as a favorite?
DP: well, I'm like the ever pregnant mother, I love them. She-freak is
probably one of my favorites. Trader Hornee was such a lot of fun to make.
Ya’ll wanna hear a little story about making that one? Did anybody
here ever see it? When we were shooting the jungle scenes up at Franklin
Park reservoir which is about five minutes from the Beverly Hills hotel
and here are all these African Americans that are running around, playing
the natives. And we can see this guy way up in the hills that looks like
a hundred million dollar home. He’s looking down and what in the
world is going on down there. Here are all these black Americans and here’s
this elephant, all of these people. So, one guy says, I’m gonna
climb up there, knock on his door and say, “Hey man, we’re
your new neighbors.” But that picture was a tremendous amount of
fun. That little blond girl. I was in Atlanta with my buddy Russ. Russ
Meyer who just passed away this last few months, thank you. This little
girl is kind of working as a concierge at the regency hotel. And I said,
“Russ, gee take a look at that kid. She’s a knockout.”
And Russ said immediately, “Ah, she doesn’t have enough uh...
(points to chest area).” And I said, “Well then you probably
should’ve worked for the carnation milk company.” That picture
to me was a lot of fun, a lot of gags in it, and it was directed by a
good friend of mine neighbor Jonathan Lucas which was also the director
of The Dean Martin Show. So I was lucky. Anyway, getting back to She-Freak,
the makeup guy in that picture was Harry Thomas. And Harry had worked
for Ed Wood. If you all remember, if you all saw, Ed Wood, the picture
with Johnny Depp, there was a character, Harry Thomas, who was the makeup
man in the film. But Harry was the makeup guy for a lot of us in those
days. I, like Ed Wood, among younger kids, I’m kinda famous because
I knew Ed Wood. And I can tell you some stories there, but I better not.
The only difference that most of us knew we were making crap but Ed really
thought he was making good pictures.
Eric:
What is the future of exploitation?
DP: The future? Well, as I said earlier, the young filmmakers of today
making exploitation films don’t have the thrill of seeing their
films in the theater. Part of exploitation was going from town to town
putting up posters just like a traveling circus or carnival. Putting out
heralds. Putting something up in front of the theater. Maybe having a
guy stand up in front and talk. “Hey, hey, here’s a show where
they take it off, wrap it up, roll it out, pull it out and throw it right
at you. The show for those between 18 and 85. The under 18 you wouldn’t
understand, the over 85, you couldn’t stand it.” You know,
you gave him a whole pitch. You gave ‘em something in the lobby.
That was real exploitation. Today there are a lot of good filmmakers.
Fred Olen Ray is a good filmmaker Jim Wynorski. These are good friends
of mine. Unfortunately they will never have the thrill that I had. That
Herschell had. That Bob Cresse and Don Davis, even Harry Hovak. Roger
Corman’s gonna be here, of seeing your picture play in a theater.
But there will always be room, I think, with DVD. I won’t say videotape
anymore, that’s the 8-track of the future. The DVD and the next
process will come along. So there will always be someway they can see
it, on internet, cable, or home video. It’ll always be there because
hey, let’s face it, its cheap thrills. And that’s what’s
its all about! So people will always pay to see the forbidden. “Adults
only”- the two magic words. In movies and or what. You’ll
gasp, you’ll winch, you’ll shudder, but you’ll see true
truths and learn facts. Hey thanks so much for coming. I hope you enjoyed
the show. You know, you can do so many things in the picture business.
You can make them laugh, you can make them cry, you can make ‘em
get fighting mad, you can make ‘em throw up, but you can’t
bore ‘em. And I hope none of you were bored tonight. Thanks so much
for coming.
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