Amir Shervan, born Amir Hosein Ghaffari , was an Iranian film director, producer, actor, and screenwriter. After studying theatre in Pasadena, California, he returned to his home country, Iran, and had a prolific cinema career that began with Parviz Khatibi's 1949 filmVaareite Bahari. all the way to his own directorial debutTorkaman. As a result of the Iranian Revolution, many Iranian films were censored or "purified" by the government, making it difficult for any films without a pro-Islamic angle to be made. This halted his filmmaking career, so he relocated to California in 1980. Between 1980 and 1987, Shervan worked to build his production company, Hollywood Royal Productions, where he aimed to make American action films, taking influence from other massive hits of the 1980s, primarily Lethal Weapon. From 1987 to 1992, produced and directed several action films, including, Hollywood Cop, Killing American Style, and Samurai Cop, which starred Matt Hannon and Robert Z'Dar. A common thread that only the most adept fan of Shervan's work would be able to pick up on, is that multiple of the same locations are used throughout his different films. For example, the estate that the majority of Killing American Style is set on, is the same building that the climax of both Samurai Cop and Hollywood Cop is set at. Shervan was known to cut the budget in other places, such as filming all of his movies during the day to avoid buying lighting equipment to use for the night sequences, or using his own production van for car chase sequences. After Samurai Cop in 1991, Shervan retired from filmmaking. Not much is known about his career outside of that. Unfortunately, Shervan died in 2006, only a year before his masterpiece would find its cult acclaim, and he would garner his status as an all time great B-Movie director. Samurai Cop was restored in a brand new HD transfer for theatrical and DVD release by distrinor Cinema Epoch in 2013. Cinema Epoch will also release Shervan's other works, including Killing American Style, Young Rebels, and Gypsy in restored versions.