Dwain Esper

Dwain Atkins Esper (October 7, 1894 – October 18, 1982) was an American director and producer of exploitation films.

Dwain Esper
Born
Dwain Atkins Esper

(1894-10-07)October 7, 1894
DiedOctober 18, 1982(1982-10-18) (aged 88)
OccupationFilmmaker, producer
Spouse(s)
Hildagarde Stadie
(
m. 1920)
Children2

Biography

A veteran of World War I, Esper worked as a building contractor before switching to the film business in the mid-'20s. He produced and directed inexpensive pictures with eye-catching titles like Sex Maniac, Marihuana, and How to Undress in Front of Your Husband. To enhance the appeal of these low-budget features, he included scenes containing gratuitous nudity and violence that led some to label him the "father of modern exploitation."[1]

Esper's wife, Hildagarde Stadie, wrote many of the scripts for his films.[2] Together they employed extravagant promotional techniques that included exhibiting the mummified body of notorious Oklahoma outlaw Elmer McCurdy, before it was acquired by Dan Sonney.[3]

Maniac (1934)

Maniac, also known as Sex Maniac, an exploitation/horror film directed by Esper, is a loose adaptation of the Edgar Allan Poe story "The Black Cat" and follows a vaudeville impersonator who becomes an assistant to a mad scientist.

It is considered by many film critics and historians to be the worst film of all time. Danny Peary believes that Maniac is the worst film ever made, Charlie Jane Anders of Gawker Media's io9 described it as "possibly the worst movie in history" and Chicago Tribune critic Michael Wilmington wrote that it may be the worst film he had ever seen, writing: "There are some voyages into ineptitude, like Dwain Esper's anti-classic Maniac, that defy all reason."[4][5][6] Rotten Tomatoes placed Maniac on their list of movies "So Bad They're Unmissable",[7] the Italian Vanity Fair included the film on its list of the 20 worst movies ever, and it is featured in The Official Razzie Movie Guide.[8]

Esper died in San Diego, California, at the age of 88.[9] He and Hildagarde had two children, Dwain Jr. and Millicent.

Filmography

Director credits

Marijuana: The Devil's Weed, 1936 opening title
  • Sinister Harvest (1930)
  • The Seventh Commandment (1932)
a.k.a. Sins of Love (US: reissue title)
a.k.a. The 7th Commandment (US: poster title)
a.k.a. Narcotic Racket (US: reissue title)
a.k.a. Narcotic! (US: promotional title)
a.k.a. Narcotic: As Interpreted by Dwain Esper (US: closing credits title)
a.k.a. Sex Maniac
a.k.a. Marihuana, the Devil's Weed
a.k.a. Marihuana, the Weed with Roots in Hell!
a.k.a. Human Wreckage (US: reissue title)
a.k.a. They Must Be Told (US: reissue title)
  • Curse of the Ubangi (1946)
  • Will It Happen Again? (1948)
a.k.a. Love Life of Adolph Hitler (US: reissue title)
a.k.a. The Strange Love Life of Adolf Hitler (US: reissue title)
a.k.a. The Strange Loves of Adolf Hitler (US: reissue title)

Producer credits

Excluding films Esper directed.
  • How to Take a Bath (1937)
  • Angkor (1935)
a.k.a. Beyond Shanghai (UK)
a.k.a. Forbidden Adventure (US: informal reissue title)
a.k.a. Forbidden Adventure in Angkor (US: reissue title, 1937)

Reissues

a.k.a. Hell-O-Vision (US)
  • Man's Way with Women
  • Freaks (uncredited) as Forbidden Love, and later Natures Mistakes with Sam Alexander providing a live appearance with some disfigured members of his 'troupe'.
  • Cain: Aventures des mers exotiques
a.k.a. Cain
gollark: I have already sent it to two other discord servers. Muahahaha.
gollark: There weren't really combining diacritics pre-unicode.
gollark: I tend to either be excessively paranoid or blindly assume good intentions with little in-between for some reason.
gollark: I actually was able to find this "jmwloup5110" person's LinkedIn account by using the advanced technique of "putting their username into duckduckgo". It looks like they do actually work on... computery things, and not recruiting somehow. This is probably not actually a problem.
gollark: They haven't done any. They just said they were in the air force. Lots of introductions talk about jobs.

References

  1. Senn, Bryan (2006). Golden Horrors: An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema, 1931-1939. McFarland & Company. p. 263. ISBN 978-0786427246.
  2. Cline, John; Weiner, Robert G., eds. (2010). From the Arthouse to the Grindhouse: Highbrow and Lowbrow Transgression in Cinema's First Century. Scarecrow Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0810876545.
  3. Schaefer, Eric (1999). Bold! Daring! Shocking! True: A History of Exploitation Films, 1919-1959. Duke University Press. p. 122. ISBN 978-0822323747.
  4. Peary, Danny (2014). Cult Midnight Movies: Discover the 37 Best Weird, Sleazy, Sexy, and Crazy Good Cinema Classics. Workman Publishing Company. ISBN 9780761181699.
  5. Anders, Charlie Jane (February 26, 2009). "Did The Worst Movie Of All Time Come Out 75 Years Ago?". io9. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  6. Wilmington, Michael (August 12, 2005). "`Chaos' a loathsome exercise in horror". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  7. "25 Movies So Bad They're Unmissable". Rotten Tomatoes. January 30, 2010. Retrieved January 25, 2015.
  8. Pellegrini, Francesca (25 February 2018). "I 20 film più brutti di sempre". Vanity Fair (in Italian). Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  9. "Dwain Esper Obituary". Variety. 27 October 1982. ISSN 0042-2738.
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