Director Joel Schumacher Dead at 80

Schumacher’s decades-long filmography includes 'St. Elmo’s Fire,' 'Lost Boys,' 'Flatliners,' 'Batman Forever,' 'Batman & Robin,' 'Phone Booth,' and more.

Joel Schumacher
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Image via Getty/Mike Coppola

Joel Schumacher

Joel Schumacher is dead at 80 years old.

The writer-director with a versatile filmography spanning decades died Monday, a representative confirmed to the Hollywood Reporter.

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Following his directorial debut in 1981 with The Incredible Shrinking Woman starring Lily Tomlin, Schumacher landed the pivotal Brat Pack entry and box office smash St. Elmo's Fire. This was followed by the beloved 1987 cult classic The Lost Boys, which remains a source of aesthetic and tonal inspiration across pop culture to this day.

Other key Schumacher entries include Flatliners, A Time to Kill, Phone Booth, The Client, and Falling Down. In the '90s, Schumacher helmed a pair of Batman films, the Val Kilmer-starring Batman Forever and the George Clooney-starring Batman & Robin.

A publicist for Joel Schumacher says that the director and filmmaker (St. Elmo's Fire, The Lost Boys, Batman & Robin) died earlier today. pic.twitter.com/MbclCtDEhb

— Dave Itzkoff (@ditzkoff) June 22, 2020

In a fascinating must-read interview with Andrew Goldman in August of last year, Schumacher reflected on his career while also offering up quotable bits of advice he often gave to film school students including "making movies is not all blow jobs and sunglasses."

He was also asked to give his thoughts on how it feels to have a movie that's not critically acclaimed go on to become a box office hit, i.e. St. Elmo's Fire. For Schumacher, it was "the greatest thing" that could happen for a filmmaker.

"Because it reminds you who you made the movie for," Schumacher said in the Vulturepiece. "And if you want to make movies just for the critics, they will fuck you anyway."

RIP.

Grease up, throw on some jeans and pour one out for Joel Schumacher pic.twitter.com/nI9Qw0gXZQ

— Patrick Monahan (@pattymo) June 22, 2020

Rest in peace, Joel Schumacher, a wildly eclectic filmmaker who made hits, bombs, Oscar winners, and Batman & Robin.

— Scott Weinberg (@scottEmovienerd) June 22, 2020

Joel Schumacher did not make a lot of movies that I liked and made several that I hated...but the man brought Colin Farrell to Hollywood and even his biggest stinkers were undeniably HIS, wind machines, dry ice and all

— David Sims (@davidlsims) June 22, 2020

RIP Joel Schumacher, who blessed my childhood with this absolutely iconic moment pic.twitter.com/4oBb91fJjZ

— Matt Erspamer (@erspamer_matt) June 22, 2020

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