Los Angeles: Costume designer-turned director Joel Schumacher, known for helming films including St Elmo's Fire, Falling Down as well as two Batman movies, has died after a year-long battle with cancer, his publicists said.
The native New Yorker passed away on Monday morning. He was 80, according to news reports.
Schumacher started off as a costume designer for 1970s films such as Woody Allen directorials Sleeper and Interiors, along with Blume in Love, The Prisoner of Second Avenue and The Last of Sheila.
He also was a production designer on the 1974 telefilm Killer Bees.
Schumacher then turned writer in the late '70s on Sparkle, Car Wash and the film adaptation of Broadway musical The Wiz, and made his directorial debut in 1981 with sci-fi comedy The Incredible Shrinking Woman, featuring Lily Tomlin in the lead.
The director, considered as one of the most popular Hollywood storytellers, also has titles such as Flawless, DC Cab, The Lost Boys, Falling Down and John Grisham adaptations The Client and A Time to Kill to his credit.
From Val Kilmer, George Clooney and Arnold Schwarzenegger in his Batman films, Nicole Kidman and Nicolas Cage in Trespass, Susan Sarandon in The Client to Kiefer Sutherland in The Lost Boys, Schumacher directed many such Hollywood A-listers.
He is also credited for nurturing rising talent at the time like Matthew McConaughey (A Time To Kill), Colin Farrell (Phone The Booth), Demi Moore and Rob Lowe (St Elmo's Fire), Gerard Butler (Phantom of the Opera), among others.
Schumacher also directed high-profile music videos including Seal's chartbuster Kiss from a Rose from his Batman Forever, INXS' Devil Inside and the Smashing Pumpkins' The End Is the Beginning Is the End, which earned him a best director nomination at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards.
His Falling Down, starring Michael Douglas as a frustrated common man who explodes in rage, premiered at Cannes in 1993 and was a Palme d'Or nominee.
8MM, the 1999 film starring Cage, Joaquin Phoenix and James Gandolfini, was up for the Golden Bear at Berlin Film Festival.
The filmmaker also directed Flatliners, Flawless and most recently two 2013 episodes of Netflix's House of Cards.
Many of Schumacher's collaborators remembered the one-of-a-kind director as a friend, visionary and someone who launched careers of several Hollywood stars.
McConaughey said he owes his career to the filmmaker, who gave him the lead role as Jake Brigance in courtroom drama A Time to Kill, at a time when he was relatively unknown.
"Joel not only took a chance on me, he fought for me. Knowing the studio might never approve a relatively unknown like myself for the lead in 'A Time to Kill,' he set up a secret screen test for me on a Sunday morning in a small unknown studio because as he stated, 'Even if you do great, you may not get the part, so I don't want the industry to ever think you screen-tested and DID NOT get the job'," the Oscar winner said.
"I don't see how my career could have gone to the wonderful places it has if it wasn't for Joel Schumacher believing in me back then," he added.
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