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David F. Friedman

 
Writer: David F. Friedman
  • Born: Dec 24, 1923 in Birmingham, Alabama
  • Occupation: Writer, Actor, Director
  • Active: '60s-'70s, 2000s
  • Major Genres: Horror, Adult
  • Career Highlights: Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat, Mau Mau Sex Sex, Two Thousand Maniacs!
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Adventures of Lucky Pierre (1961)

Biography

Producer, screenwriter, and unrepentant carny David F. Friedman spent the bulk of the 20th century making and distributing exploitation films, working with some of the most notorious figures in the business and eventually adding his own name to that list. Born and raised in Alabama, Friedman became interested in showbiz at an early age. As a youth, he spent time in movie theaters owned by his uncle, and he worked with traveling carnivals during the summers while attending Cornell University. After a stint in the army, Friedman was hired by Paramount Pictures, where he worked in the distribution and publicity departments. He went independent in 1956 and hooked up with legendary road-show entrepreneur Kroger Babb, learning invaluable promotional scams from the veteran producer and eventually becoming a partner in his company, Modern Film Distributors. In the early '60s, Friedman made a series of films with director Herschell Gordon Lewis, starting with a number of fairly typical low-budget, nudist-colony features. While brainstorming a way to stay a step ahead of their competitors, the pair decided to switch to horror, and created what most regard as the very first "gore" films; Blood Feast, 2000 Maniacs, and Color Me Blood Red were crudely fashioned, but focused attention on graphic, bloody violence that films of the past had only hinted at. They were extremely successful, for better or for worse, helped ensure that future horror movies left far less to the imagination.

Friedman next turned his attention to the adult film industry, following the zeitgeist of the times with stark, bad-tempered pictures that mixed nudity and simulated sex with brutality, also known as "roughies." As on-screen restrictions loosened in the early '70s, Friedman's films generally went easier on the violence and amplified the sexuality, leading to a string of bawdy softcore sex farces (Trader Hornee, The Erotic Adventures of Zorro, and Thar She Blows, among many others). Friedman was never interested in following the path of permissiveness all the way to hardcore pornography, so as triple-X films proliferated and the drive-in theaters that showed his pictures began closing, he decided to bow out of the business. Though retired, he held on to the rights to his films (which found a whole new audience on videotape) and kept his hand in the traveling carnival business. Friedman wrote a popular memoir entitled A Youth in Babylon: Confessions of a Trash-Film King and subsequently became known as the grand old man of exploitation cinema, in demand for documentaries and fan conventions for his colorful anecdotes and encyclopedic knowledge of low-budget film history. ~ Fred Beldin, All Movie Guide
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David F. Friedman (born December 24, 1923) is an American filmmaker and film producer from Birmingham, Alabama.

Friedman first became interested in entertainment after spending parts of his childhood at traveling carnival sites. He met exploitation film pioneer Kroger Babb during his stay in the Army. This encounter got him interested in films. Working as a regional marketing man for Paramount he sensed the money in independent distributing and started his own company in the 1950s. His company mainly produced so-called Nudie Cuties, films such as Goldilocks and The Three Bares shot in nudist colonies being the closest thing to pornography legally available back then. This trend was followed by the sexploitation and "Roughie" genres, depicting simulated sex with a more violent edge, often horror- or crime-related. Examples of Friedman's roughies are The Adult Version Of Jekyll and Hide and The Headmistress (1968). Helming one of those movies Friedman started his working relationship with Chicago based teacher and film maker Herschell Gordon Lewis.

Friedman went on to produce the latter's 1963 film Blood Feast, an American exploitation film often considered the first "gore" or splatter film. He was also the producer of two of the first Nazi Exploitation films, Love Camp 7 (1969) and Ilsa: She-Wolf of the SS (1974), credited as Herman Traeger.

With the advent of hard core porn as a commercial factor in the mid 70s Friedman began to slow down his output. His work ethic "Sell the sizzle not the steak" would not comply with actual intercourse shown on screen. Still he was president of an organization of Adult Film Makers.

In the early 1990s Seattle's Something Weird Video, owned by Mike Vraney, started to re-issue the work of David Friedman, getting him the attention of a new generation exploitation and b-movie collectors. He can be heard on the audio commentary track of some of the company's releases. In 2000, Friedman was featured alongside cult filmmakers Roger Corman, Doris Wishman, Harry Novak and others in the documentary SCHLOCK! The Secret History of American Movies, a film about the rise and fall of American exploitation cinema.

In 2001, he co-starred with long time business partner Dan Sonney in the documentary Mau Mau Sex Sex (IMDb entry).

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