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Norman J. Warren

Norman J. Warren
Born Norman John Warren
(1942-06-25) 25 June 1942 (age 74)
Hammersmith, London, England, UK
Nationality British
Occupation Film director, editor, producer
Years active 1959–present
Notable work Satan's Slave (1976)
Prey (1977)
Terror (1978)
Spaced Out (1979)
Inseminoid (1981)
Style Horror
Science fiction
Sex comedy

Norman John Warren (born 25 June 1942 in Hammersmith, London) is an English film director best known for such 1970s horror films as Satan's Slave (1976), Prey (1977) and Terror (1978). Warren is also known for sex comedies such as Spaced Out (also known as Outer Spaced and Outer Touch, 1979).

Along with Peter Walker, Warren's films are sometimes dubbed "New Wave" British horror, on the basis that they upped the ante in terms of explicitness, were set in modern-day 1970s Britain and centred on young protagonists of ages between 20 and 30, distinguishing them from the period piece horrors of Hammer Films that had appeared before.

An avid film fan from childhood, Warren entered the film industry as a runner on The Millionairess (1960) and as an assistant director (The Dock Brief, 1962) before directing the short film Fragment in 1965. Calcutta-born Bachoo Sen (1934–2002), owner of the Astral Cinema in Brewer Street, London, who had an interest in film production, saw Fragment and subsequently hired Warren to direct two feature-length sex films, Her Private Hell (1968) and Loving Feeling (1969). Both were successes, but Warren saw little of the profits.

Not wanting to be typecast as a director of sex films, Warren turned down a third directing offer from Sen (which would have been 1970's Love is a Splendid Illusion) and had to wait several years to raise the money required to make Satan's Slave (1976), the first of a series of horror films that he would direct. Warren's final two films, Bloody New Year and Gunpowder (both 1987), were hampered by low budgets imposed by producer Maxine Julius.


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