Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Albert Zugsmith (April 24, 1910 – October 26, 1993) was an American film producer, film director and screenwriter who specialized in low-budget exploitation films through the 1950s and 1960s.

  2. Confessions of an Opium Eater: Directed by Albert Zugsmith. With Vincent Price, Linda Ho, Richard Loo, June Kyoto Lu. In 19th-century San Francisco's Chinatown, American adventurer Gilbert De Quincey saves slave girls owned by the Chinese Tong factions.

    • (791)
    • Crime, Drama, Mystery
    • Albert Zugsmith
    • 1962-06-20
  3. May 27, 2014 · Its director, Albert Zugsmith, produced a number of Hollywood classics, including Written on the Wind (1956) and Touch of Evil (1958). The director of photography was the veteran Joseph Biroc, who had worked on It’s a Wonderful Life (1946) and Kiss Me Deadly (1955), among many others.

  4. Directed by Albert Zugsmith. Take one daring step beyond the threshold of your own imagination. Vincent Price stars in this early ’60s adaptation of Thomas De Quincey’s thriller about an opium addict trying to solve a mystery in San Franciscos Chinatown. Remove Ads. Cast. Crew. Details. Genres. Releases.

    • (801)
    • Photoplay Productions
    • Albert Zugsmith
  5. Jun 1, 2003 · The great Vincent Price stars as opium-addict Gilbert de Quincey (relation to Albert unstated), an international adventurer who arrives in San Francisco in the early 1800s and discovers the illegal trade of Asian slave women inside a labyrinthine house of horrors.

  6. Albert Zugsmith was born on April 24, 1910 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA. He was a producer and director, known for Touch of Evil (1958), Sappho Darling (1968) and The Cult (1971). He died on October 26, 1993 in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA.

  7. Feb 10, 2022 · Without being especially entertaining or exciting, this Albert Zugsmith effort is a truly bizarre concoction – a 1902-set San Francisco Chinatown tong war/sex slave melodrama with high-flown Vincent Price narration (somehow yoking in Thomas de Quincey’s 1820 memoir as source material) and a major role for an ageing midget courtesan (Yvonne ...

  1. People also search for