Albert Victor Adamson Jr. (July 25, 1929 – June 21, 1995) was an American filmmaker and actor known as a prolific director of B movie horror and exploitation films throughout the 1960s and 1970s.

The son of silent film veterans Victor Adamson and Dolores Booth, Adamson began his career in the film industry at a young age and began directing in the early 1960s, helming a total of 33 feature films. Many of his films, such as Psycho A-Go-Go, Blood of Ghastly Horror, and Dracula vs. Frankenstein, went on to gain cult status. He cast his wife, actress and singer Regina Carrol, in many of his films.

Adamson retired from filmmaking in the early 1980s to pursue a career in real estate. In 1995, he was murdered by a live-in contractor whom he had hired to work on his house, and he was subsequently buried beneath the floor in his bathroom.

Early life

Albert Victor Adamson Jr. was born in Hollywood, California. His father was silent film star and producer Victor Adamson, also known as Art Mix and Denver Dixon, and his mother was actress Dolores Booth. Adamson was involved in the film industry from an early age, appearing in the low budget 1935 film Desert Mesa, directed by his father.

Film career

After assisting his father in making the 1961 western Half Way to Hell, where he served as an uncredited co-director, Adamson decided to work in the motion-picture industry himself full time. His father introduced him to a young aspiring film distributor named Sam Sherman in September 1962, and they worked together on various film projects during the 1960s. In 1969, Adamson and Sherman founded Independent-International Pictures (in partnership with Dan Kennis), Adamson and Sherman hired Zsigmond, whom they nicknamed "Ziggy", because the young filmmaker owned his own equipment, including an 35mm Arriflex film camera and a Techniscope lens, which he carried around in a van. Zsigmond had an arrangement with his close friend Kovács where the two would recommend each other to directors, both claiming the other was the superior cinematographer. Their collaboration continued until 1971, when Zsigmond was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Cinematography for Robert Altman's McCabe & Mrs. Miller. Sherman also hired artist Gray Morrow to design a number of their horror film posters, all of which were very graphic and "over the top". Adamson filmed some of his movies at the Spahn Ranch in southern California (the adopted home of the notorious Manson Family), such as The Female Bunch (1969) and Angels' Wild Women (1972). Adamson considered their 1974 film Girls For Rent (a.k.a. I Spit on Your Corpse) a low point in their association, featuring porn actress Georgina Spelvin raping, and then killing, a mentally disabled man in one scene. Jessie's Girls was Adamson's take on the then-successful Raquel Welch film Hannie Caulder. His last major film was the 1978 film Nurse Sherri, a horror film about a nurse who is possessed by the ghost of a woman who died during a surgical procedure, and is driven to avenge the dead woman by killing all of the doctors who were involved in her death.

Adamson largely retired from filmmaking in the early 1980s, focusing with his wife on a career in real estate.

Personal life

Adamson's wife, the actress Regina Carrol, performed in many of his later films. Adamson said Regina was a waitress in a cafe at which he was having lunch, and hearing he was a movie director, she spilled a cup of coffee in his lap to get his attention. Five weeks later, after law enforcement officials discovered his remains beneath the concrete and tile-covered floor where his hot tub once sat at his home in Indio, California, his live-in contractor Fred Fulford was arrested at the Coral Reef Hotel in Saint Petersburg, Florida.

Adamson had hired Fulford to repair his house, which he intended to flip. He had given Fulford a credit card to use to purchase supplies, which Fulford quickly overspent and abused. Adamson had several confrontations with Fulford, the last of which ended violently in Adamson's death. Fulford subsequently buried his body and covered it with concrete and tile. Adamson's housekeeper became suspicious over his disappearance and the removal of the hot tub, which led investigators to Fulford and Adamson's body.

Fulford was convicted of murder, and sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.<!-- any reason for the murder --> Regular Adamson actor and stuntman Gary Kent testified in the trial as the last person to speak to the director prior to the murder. The case of Al Adamson's murder is documented in the Investigation Discovery television series' Forensic Detectives (ep. "Buried Secrets"), The New Detectives (season 07, episode 11), and A Stranger in My Home (season 02, episode 06, "Death's Final Cut"). Blood & Flesh: The Reel Life and Ghastly Death of Al Adamson, a full-length documentary released by Severin Films, covers the entirety of Adamson's life, film career, and untimely death. The documentary is included in Severin's Blu-ray boxed set career retrospective of Adamson's work.

Adamson was cremated and his ashes scattered in the Pacific Ocean.

Filmography

  • Desert Mesa (1935) actor in a film from his father Denver Dixon
  • Mormon Conquest (1939) actor in another, lost, film from his father
  • Half Way to Hell (1960) co-direction with his father, also actor
  • Psycho A-Go-Go (1965) later reworked into The Fiend with the Electronic Brain
  • Blood of Dracula's Castle (1967)
  • Lash of Lust (1968/72) (Lost Film, direction under alias name George Sheaffer)
  • The Fiend with the Electronic Brain (1969) later reworked into Blood of Ghastly Horror
  • Five Bloody Graves (1969)
  • Satan's Sadists (1969)
  • Doomsday Voyage (1969/72) producer only
  • Hell's Bloody Devils (1970)
  • Horror of the Blood Monsters (1970) a.k.a. Vampire Men of the Lost Planet
  • Blood of Ghastly Horror (1971)
  • Hammer (1972) producer only
  • Cry Rape (1973) (TV movie, producer only)
  • The Naughty Stewardesses (1973)
  • Dynamite Brothers (1974) a.k.a. Stud Brown
  • I Spit on Your Corpse (1974) originally released as Girls for Rent