An Expensive Hobby
The best-known film collector in the early 1970s to run afoul of the FBI is no longer around to share his story. At the time, the elfin, instantly
recognizable British actor with the wonderfully musical birthname of Roderick Andrew Anthony Jude McDowall was experiencing a career resurgence. Since
1968, when he’d played the sympathetic chimpanzee Cornelius in Franklin J. Schaffner’s epochal Planet of the Apes, Roddy McDowall had starred in three more
films in the hugely successful series. The studio had left him out of the first sequel—the weird, dystopian Beneath the Planet of the Apes
—but thankfully brought him back as Cornelius for the next, Escape from the Planet of the Apes. Even better, they reinvented his character as Cornelius’s
rabble-rousing, revolutionary son Caesar, leading his people—or chimps—to freedom in Conquest of the Planet of the Apes and Battle for the Planet of the Apes. In the former he gets to deliver one of the series’ most memorable speeches: “We have passed through
the night of the fires, and those who were our masters are now our servants. And we, who are not human, can afford to be humane. . . . So, cast out your
vengeance. Tonight, we have seen the birth of the planet of the apes!” McDowall had become the actor most identified with the blockbuster series. In modern
Hollywood parlance, he’d become “essential to the franchise.”
And the Apes films weren’t his only success: he’d also co-starred with Gene Hackman, Ernest Borgnine, and Shelley Winters in director
Ronald Neame’s gargantuan, melodramatic, and hugely entertaining The Poseidon Adventure, still by far the best of the early 1970s disaster
movies. It was, all in all, a remarkable career turn for a man who’d started thirty years earlier as a slender child actor in How Green Was My Valley, Lassie Come Home, and My Friend Flicka. McDowall was, in a word, cool. He’d
even been brought back as yet another chimpanzee, Galen, in the Planet of the Apes TV series, for which 20th Century Fox and CBS had high hopes. It was one
thing to be a working actor—McDowall had always worked, since he was barely six years old, and he’d continue working up until his death in 1998. But to
work and be successful, that was a rich reward for any performer, and especially one who loved the movies and Hollywood as he did.
It was in fact his deep passion for films—not just his own, but those of his friends and coworkers—that brought him to the attention of the FBI in late
1974. McDowall had been doing business with two film dealers that the FBI was keeping a close eye on: indirectly, Roy H. Wagner (later an Emmy-winning
cinematographer on shows like House and CSI, and interviewed separately for this book), and directly, a notorious character named Ray Atherton. The
Chicago-born Atherton would later appear briefly in director John McNaughton’s savage 1986 cult hit Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer. He
played a pawn-shop owner who kills a man by breaking a television set over his head. It was apparently typecasting for Atherton. He’s been described by
former employee Ted Newsom (who directed the delightful documentary Ed Wood: Look Back in Angora) as “perhaps the foulest-mouthed, most
racist, anti-Semitic, misogynistic, hateful fucker I have ever met.” Newsom, who has a way with words, goes on to say that Atherton would “go over to the
liquor store across the street nearly on a daily basis . . . 9:30 AM or 10:00 or 10:30. More often than not, he’d be so totally hammered by 1:00 PM that
he’d either go on a rant, at which point you couldn’t work at all, or he’d segue into nappy time, and just pass out with his head on his desk. It was an
impressive sight. He probably weighed 350 or 400 pounds, six foot two or six foot three, bald with a Friar Tuck fringe of hair. Horned-rim glasses.”
Collector Mark Haggard, who knew Atherton well, says that he later did a brisk business selling documentaries on Church of Satan leader Anton LaVey,
including Speak of the Devil (1995), which Atherton executive produced—and also, perhaps not coincidentally, had a church member working
on his staff. “It’s all bullshit,” Atherton told Haggard one day about LaVey and Satanism. “But it interests people, and it sells a lot of videos.” Among
his other offenses (and there were apparently many), Atherton ridiculed a group of Muslims that he regularly did business with. According to Newsom, “at
least four times a day, they got out their prayer rugs, and bowed to Mecca, and did their business. Ray at one point stole one of their prayer rugs. He was
drunk, I’m sure. Calling attention to it so everybody’d watch through the window, he went down to the parking lot and kept throwing it into the air,
crying, ‘Fly, motherfucker, fly!!’” All in all, a bizarre character for someone of McDowall’s reputation to be doing business with. But Atherton had what
McDowall and all other collectors desperately wanted, and that was access to prints.
According to an article in the Los Angeles Times, in November 1974, the FBI requested a sit-down interview with McDowall about his supposed dealings with
Atherton. Apparently, an unnamed informant had seen a list of films that McDowall was attempting to sell through Atherton and his associate Roy Wagner; a
copy of the list was seized in a raid on September 4 at Wagner’s home. During the initial FBI interview, McDowall admitted that he’d bought films from
Atherton in the past, but when he was asked if he’d ever sold movies through Atherton (potentially a more serious crime), McDowall “declined to provide
further information.” Sensing they had a major target in their sights, the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney Chester “Chet” Brown moved in for the kill.
Of all the behind-the-scenes players in the early 1970s “film busts,” the most active on the law-enforcement side—and the most opaque, personally—was Chet
Brown. Looking back, he may not have been the main driving force behind the busts—certainly the MPAA, working on behalf of the studios, was pushing for the
crackdown to protect their copyright interests—but Brown became the main figurehead, at least for a while, and much of film collectors’ and dealers’ ire
was (and still is) directed at him. Roy H. Wagner, who was targeted in the Atherton–McDowall case, describes Brown as “an egomaniac” and adds, “He was so
fascinated that he was doing something with the movie business. He was talking about the movie stars that were going to befriend him because he was going
to save the movie business.” Collector and electrician Peter Dyck, who was also targeted in the highly publicized film piracy arrests in 1975, still
becomes enraged at the mention of Brown’s name: “He hated film collectors. It’s like in Patton, when General Bradley says to General Patton, ‘I do this job
because I’ve been trained to do it. You do it because you love it.’ Chet Brown was the same way.” Even James Bouras, who was working for the MPAA at the
time, says that Brown “obviously had ambitions of what he was going to do after he left the U.S. Attorney’s office.”
These judgments, many of them from collectors and dealers who felt personally singled out and harassed by the feds and the Justice Department, are
obviously a bit biased. On the flip side, Brown’s former boss at the time, U.S. Attorney Dominick Rubalcava, told me that Brown was “hardworking,
enthusiastic, and focused. Chet was a hardworking guy. Again, in the U.S. Attorney’s office, once you develop an expertise you get handed those cases. Some
guys like doing bank robbery cases. Some like drug dealing. Some guys like fraud or IRS cases.” Chet Brown obviously had a taste and talent for film piracy
cases, and for several years his name appeared repeatedly in connection with film raids in the Los Angeles area. The most high-profile of these was
directed at Roddy McDowall.
On December 18, 1974, the FBI, search warrant in hand, barged into McDowall’s home in North Hollywood and seized some five hundred film prints and
videotapes (the number was later revised to over a thousand videos and one hundred sixty 16mm prints.) The raid, which appeared in the Los Angeles Times a
month later, on January 17, 1975, and was picked up nationally by news services, was a massive personal blow to McDowall’s career, and by far the biggest
“get” in the FBI’s and Justice Department’s war on film piracy. If they were trying to send a warning to other collectors and dealers, then the message was
delivered loud and clear. Even now, forty years later, a number of collectors and dealers mention the McDowall raid as a watershed moment that kicked off a
general wave of fear and paranoia that lingers in the collecting subculture to this day.
From the FBI’s perspective, the raid was a great success. According to an internal U.S. government memorandum dated July 1975, the “recovery value of
pirated motion picture films . . . and miscellaneous equipment which were seized from Roddy McDowall, prominent motion picture actor, during the execution
of a search warrant at McDowall’s residence” totaled $5,005,426. The memo goes on to state that “most of his collection was pirated.” Among the films
seized were prints of McDowall’s own movies Lassie Come Home, My Friend Flicka, and several of the Planet of the Apes movies. How the feds arrived at the astronomical valuation for McDowall’s collection is a good question. Even at the
height of the underground film market, $5 million seems more like wishful thinking than reality. As a benchmark for comparison, dealers Ken Kramer and Jeff
Joseph were selling prints around the same time to Playboy magazine publisher Hugh Hefner for the premium price of $500 for a black-and-white movie and
$1,000 for a color movie. Even assuming all of McDowall’s films were color and that he could sell them for the same high price, that’s still only 160 16mm
prints x $1,000 equals $160,000. The value of the videos is another matter, and in retrospect it may be those that the studios and the feds were most
alarmed by, since it was apparent that McDowall was taping movies off TV and also transferring his prints to video. Ironically, in just a few years, your
average American consumer would have just about the same number of videos taped off TV on their newfangled VCR or Betamax machines, maybe not quite as many
as film buff McDowall—but nobody broke down their doors with a search warrant.
What happened next is not Roddy McDowall’s finest moment. Faced with prosecution and a potentially crippling blow to his career, he rolled over and named
names. Even using the term “named names” is politically charged, since it brings to mind Hollywood professionals informing on their coworkers to the House
Un-American Activities Committee during the communist witch hunts of the 1950s. McDowall’s situation was very different: he was the target of a legal
investigation aimed at rooting out film pirates in Hollywood. To call McDowall a “pirate,” though, as the government’s internal memo implies, is a
stretch—like many, possibly the majority, of film collectors Jeff and I interviewed, he’d turned to occasionally selling prints from his collection. Here he
was, publicly linked with a guy like Ray Atherton, a Muslim-baiting, anti-Semitic loose cannon. Put yourself in McDowall’s shoes, and what would you do?
What follows is an abbreviated transcript of McDowall’s confession to the FBI, heavily redacted, with many names blacked out. It’s a fairly remarkable
document, often poignant in describing his childhood and career. It clearly shows his enormous, abiding love for the movies, and also the enormous stress
that collectors were put under when they found themselves caught in the government’s legal net