CS Video: Roger Corman talks his six-decade film career Last year, not long after cult cinema legend Roger Corman turned 90, we had the chance to interview him to coincide with his new production of Death Race 2050, a legitimate sequel/reboot 1975’s satirical bloodbath Death Race 2000. It was an honor to sit across from the man who first tapped into teenage audiences with his low-budget delinquent and monster flicks in the ’50s, then his Edgar Allan Poe movies with Vincent Price in the ’60s, then the counterculture drug and biker movies of the late ’60s, the women-in-prison exploitation of the ’70s, on into his recent throwback monster flicks for Syfy.