Lee Frost(1935-2007)
- Director
- Writer
- Cinematographer
Lee Frost rates highly as one of the best, most talented and versatile
filmmakers in the annals of exploitation cinema. Frost was born on
August 14, 1935, in Globe, Arizona. He grew up in Glendale, California,
and Oahu, Hawaii. He eventually wound up in Hollywood, where he started
his career making TV commercials for the studio Telepics. Frost made
his film debut with the early 1960s nudie cutie
Surftide 77 (1962). He went on to
make a slew of films in many different genres: tongue-in-cheek horror
comedy
(House on Bare Mountain (1962)),
mondo shock documentaries
(Hollywood's World of Flesh (1963),
Mondo Bizarro (1966),
Mondo Freudo (1966)), perverse
softcore roughies
(The Defilers (1965),
The Animal (1968)), crime drama
(The Pick-Up (1968)), westerns
(Hot Spur (1968),
The Scavengers (1969)) and even
Nazisploitation (Love Camp 7 (1969),
which has been widely cited as the prototype for the notorious
Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS (1975)).
A majority of Frost's 1960s features were made for legendary trash
flick producer Bob Cresse. Moreover, Lee
added sex inserts into such foreign films as
London in the Raw (1964),
Night Women (1964) and
Witchcraft '70 (1969).
Frost continued cranking out entertainingly sleazy drive-in items
throughout the 1970s; they include the startling psycho sniper outing
Zero in and Scream (1971), the
passable biker opus
Chrome and Hot Leather (1971),
the gritty
Chain Gang Women (1971), the
hilariously campy
The Thing with Two Heads (1972),
the immensely enjoyable
Policewomen (1974), the gnarly
blaxploitation winner
The Black Gestapo (1975), the
rowdy redneck romp
Dixie Dynamite (1976) and the
jolting roughie porno shocker
A Climax of Blue Power (1974).
Frost often cast former football player
Phil Hoover in his 1970s movies and
frequently collaborated with producer/screenwriter
Wes Bishop (in addition to their own
pictures, Frost and Bishop wrote the script for
Jack Starrett's terrific
Race with the Devil (1975),
which Frost was originally supposed to direct as well). Both Frost and
Bishop often appear as actors, usually in small parts, in Frost's
films. Lee worked as an editor on industrial movies for a film
laboratory throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. His last feature was
the straight-to-video Shannon Whirry
erotic thriller
Private Obsession (1995).
Lee Frost died at age 71 on May 25, 2007.
Lee Frost died at age 71 on May 25, 2007.