John 'Bud' Cardos(1929-2020)
- Actor
- Stunts
- Transportation Department
Versatile and underrated B-movie Renaissance man John "Bud" Cardos was
born in 1929 in St. Louis, Missouri. His family has interesting roots
in the entertainment industry: his cousin Spyros Skouras worked at
Twentieth Century-Fox and his father and uncle managed the lavish
Graumann's Egyptian and Chinese theaters. Cardos began his lengthy and
extensive show business career as a child actor in
Hal Roach's 1940s "Our Gang" comedies.
He was a rodeo rider in his teen years, and worked as an animal
wrangler and bird handler on
Alfred Hitchcock's outstanding
killer animal classic The Birds (1963).
Cardos achieved his greatest cult popularity acting in several
entertainingly trashy exploitation features for legendary Grade-Z
schlockmeister Al Adamson: he's especially
memorable as Mohawk-sporting Native American biker Firewater in the
splendidly sleazy
Satan's Sadists (1969) and as
crazed half-breed Joe Lightfoot in the gritty (and often incoherent)
western
Five Bloody Graves (1969). He
got into stunt work, and among the films Cardos performed stunts in
are Nightmare in Wax (1969), the
trippy hippie gem Psych-Out (1968),
The Savage Seven (1968),
The Incredible 2-Headed Transplant (1971),
and Savage Soldier (1971). Cardos tackled second unit
director chores for Sam Peckinpah's
magnificent landmark western
The Wild Bunch (1969). He was a
production manager on many movies; they include the creepy
Dead of Night (1974),
Killers Three (1968),
The Rebel Rousers (1970),
Lash of Lust (1972),
Smashing the Crime Syndicate (1970),
and Deadwood '76 (1965).
Cardos made his directorial debut with the blaxploitation item The Red, White, and Black (1970). His other directorial efforts include the superior revolt-of-nature horror winner Kingdom of the Spiders (1977), the not-half-bad sci-fi/horror opus The Dark (1979), and the nifty zombie flick Forbidden World (1982). Outside of his substantial film work, Cardos also did Western art. He died at age 91 on December 31, 2020 in Acton, California.
Cardos made his directorial debut with the blaxploitation item The Red, White, and Black (1970). His other directorial efforts include the superior revolt-of-nature horror winner Kingdom of the Spiders (1977), the not-half-bad sci-fi/horror opus The Dark (1979), and the nifty zombie flick Forbidden World (1982). Outside of his substantial film work, Cardos also did Western art. He died at age 91 on December 31, 2020 in Acton, California.