Larry Cohen, the director of campy horror classics like Its Alive, The Stuff, Q and God Told Me To, has died at the age of 77.
Bloody Disgusting first reported news of the prolific screenwriter and filmmakers death, which Cohens publicist confirmed to the Hollywood Reporter, adding that Cohen died Saturday night surrounded by friends and loved ones. No cause of death was revealed.
Cohen who also penned the grisly Maniac Cop series, Best Seller, Phone Booth and Cellular alongside episodes of police procedurals like Columbo and NYPD Blue was a beloved figure in the horror film community.
Sad news for Horror film fans. Larry Cohen created some true classics RIP #LarryCohen https://t.co/LrqA5WBGiX
Kirk Hammett (@KirkHammett) March 24, 2019
After serving a television writer on a variety of series throughout the Sixties, Cohen moved behind the camera with a trio of Blaxploitation films, 1972s Bone and 1973s Black Caesar and Hell Up in Harlem. The following year, with the arrival of 1974s Its Alive, Cohen would move into the horror genre hes most associated with.
I think I was ahead of my time and still am, as a matter of fact. I mean, all the movies that Ive made were reflecting whatwas going onsocially in the country, Cohen told Birth Movies Death in 2018.
Look atBone the first movie I ever made which was about racism in America. I didnt realize when I made it in 1970, that 40 years later itdstill be very, very relevant. So, youre looking at that picture and it really deals with racism in America which still exists, mind you. People are still being victimized, right and left.
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Cohen would also direct critically maligned cult favorites like 1976s God Told Me To, which Rolling Stone reevaluated in 2018, 1981s werewolf flick Full Moon High, the 1982 monster movie Q, a pair of Its Alive sequels and the horror film The Stuff, the directors sinister take on consumerism.
With The Stuff, I wanted to make a picture that had something to say, Cohen told Birth Movies Death. Ofcourse, people are still packaging products today which kill people, and then advertising them on television. It used to be cigarettes. But today, theres no cigarette advertising on television. Its all medicines, all pharmaceutical stuff. One after the other. And of course they tell you about the product and then they tell you the side effects. And usually one of the side effects is death.
Outside of the horror genre, Cohen also helmed 1977s The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover, which explored the rumored private life of the FBI director, the 1996 Blaxploitation reunion film Original Gangstas and 1989s Wicked Stepmother, acting legend Bette Davis final film.
A documentary dedicated to Cohens filmmaking legacy, King Cohen, was released in 2018.
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