Samuel Z. Arkoff  

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-"We had no [[parents]] in them, that's one of the important things. We never had any parents in the [[beach film|"Beach" pictures]]. [...] The ideal world for a teenager is a parentless existence. No parents to shout at 'em, no parents to lecture at 'em, no adults to rule them, to teach them, to mock them, to jail them. That was really what it was all about."--[[Samuel Z. Arkoff]]+"We had no [[parents]] in them, that's one of the important things. We never had any parents in the [[Beach party film |"Beach" pictures]]. [...] The ideal world for a teenager is a parentless existence. No parents to shout at 'em, no parents to lecture at 'em, no adults to rule them, to teach them, to mock them, to jail them. That was really what it was all about."--[[Samuel Z. Arkoff]] in ''[[Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies]]''
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Revision as of 20:52, 16 May 2024

"We had no parents in them, that's one of the important things. We never had any parents in the "Beach" pictures. [...] The ideal world for a teenager is a parentless existence. No parents to shout at 'em, no parents to lecture at 'em, no adults to rule them, to teach them, to mock them, to jail them. That was really what it was all about."--Samuel Z. Arkoff in Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies

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Samuel Z. Arkoff (June 12 1918September 16 2001) was an American producer of B-movies.

Born in Fort Dodge, Iowa to a Russian Jewish family, Arkoff first studied to be a lawyer. Along with business partner James H. Nicholson and producer-director Roger Corman, he produced eighteen films. In the 1950s, he and Nicholson founded American Releasing Corporation, which later became known as American International Pictures and produced over 125 films before the company's demise in the 1980s. These films were mostly low-budget, with production completed in a few days, though nearly all of them became profitable.

Arkoff is also credited with starting a few genres, such as the Beach Party and outlaw biker movies, and his company played a substantial part in bringing the horror movie genre to a novel level with successes such as Blacula, I Was a Teenage Werewolf and The Thing with Two Heads. American International Pictures movies starred many established actors in principal or cameo roles, such as Boris Karloff, Elsa Lanchester and Vincent Price, as well as up-and-comers who later became household names, including Don Johnson, Nick Nolte, Diane Ladd, and most notably Jack Nicholson (no relation to James Nicholson). A number of actors shunned or overlooked by most of Hollywood during the 1960s and 1970s, such as Bruce Dern and Dennis Hopper, also found work in one or more of Arkoff's productions. Arkoff's most financially successful film was the 1979 adaptation of Jay Anson's book The Amityville Horror.

Not long after American International Pictures went out of business, Arkoff founded Arkoff International Pictures.

In 2000, Arkoff was featured alongside former collaborators including Roger Corman, Dick Miller and Peter Bogdanovich in the documentary SCHLOCK! The Secret History of American Movies, a film about the rise and fall of American exploitation cinema.

Arkoff died in 2001, within weeks of his wife's own death.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Samuel Z. Arkoff" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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