Williams, is an American director, writer, producer and actor best known for directing a series of films in the late-1960s to early-1970s exploring counterculture life: Out of It (1969), The Revolutionary (1970) and Dealing: Or the Berkeley-to-Boston Forty-Brick Lost-Bag Blues (1972).
[1] He also directed Nunzio for Universal (1975),[2] "Miss Right" (1981) for Sony, "Mirage" (1990), and "The November Men" (1994).
As an actor, he appeared in films that he also directed including The November Men (1994) and Mirage (1996).
He spent years (2001–2003) preparing And the Walls Came Tumbling Down, a film about Pope John Paul II and his role in the fall of Communism in Western Europe.
In 2015, Waterside Press published Williams' book about perception, extraordinary experience and the digital photographic process, Image of a Spirit.