Biography
Although he's seldom been a favorite of mainstream critics, and has veered widely (and even, at times, awkwardly) between seriousness and satire, Larry Cohen has proved to be one of the more successful screenwriters, directors, and producers to emerge from television in the 1950s -- indeed, along with his older, comedy-oriented contemporaries
Mel Brooks and
Carl Reiner, Cohen may be among the last alumni of 1950s television to have an active, viable career in film and television in the 21st century. Born and raised in New York City, in northern Manhattan's Washington Heights, he attended City College (CUNY) and New York University, and broke into the entertainment business as a page at the NBC Building in Rockefeller Center. He wrote scripts for some of the television anthology shows of the late '50s, including
Kraft Television Theatre, Zane Grey Theater, the U.S. Steel Hour, and
Roald Dahl's
Way Out, plus the suspense program
Checkmate.
Cohen was treading water professionally, however, mostly because he was living on the wrong coast. Live television, which had helped launch such giants in the writing field as
Paddy Chayefsky and writer/producer
Reginald Rose, and which was the main thrust of (and justification for) New York production, was disappearing rapidly at the end of the 1950s. Most of the best television had shifted to film, and was coming out of Los Angeles by the time Cohen was ready to move up from the anthology series. He was lucky enough, however, to get a shot writing for one of the last of the truly good, successful dramas out of New York,
The Defenders. The weekly series, starring E.G. Marshall and
Robert Reed as a father-and-son team of defense attorneys, was easily the most critically acclaimed dramatic program on television during the early '60s, and Cohen got to write several scripts for the series. With that under his belt, he was able to move on to other top-quality programs on both coasts, including
The Nurses, Sam Benedict (another lawyer show, starring
Edmond O'Brien), Arrest & Trial (the distant precursor to Law & Order), and
The Fugitive.
In 1964, using the movie
The Four Feathers (1939) as his initial inspiration, and also drawing from his boyhood memories of watching the Sam Fuller movie
I Shot Jesse James -- which dealt with greed, guilt, and attempted redemption in the Old West -- he conceived the series
Branded. The latter program, a serious and often surprising psychologically oriented Western starring
Chuck Connors as a cavalry officer unjustly convicted of cowardice in battle, gave the familiar genre several new twists. It also ran for two seasons on NBC and established Cohen as one of the better creative minds in television of the era. He devised other series over the next few years, including such unusual entries as Coronet Blue and
The Invaders. Meanwhile, Cohen also became involved with motion pictures by way of the Mirisch brothers, for whom he conceived and wrote the movie
Return of the Magnificent Seven (1966), which started a string of sequels (none as good as the first) to
The Magnificent Seven (1960). It was also at Cohen's insistence that the movie revived
Elmer Bernstein's score for the sequel, which was originally not under consideration, and which got the composer a belated Oscar nomination.
On many of these shows, Cohen showed a knack, as a writer and creator, for tapping into odd, unconventional storylines. Coronet Blue quickly developed a cult following and, in fact, anticipated The Bourne Identity in its story of an amnesiac (
Frank Converse) fished out of the river and caught in a web of espionage and terror. Even more unsettling was
The Invaders, starring
Roy Thinnes as a man who spots a flying saucer landing and is forced to spend his life convincing others of the dangers of invasion. The latter series seemed to tap into a growing, underlying paranoia and uncertainty spreading through society, about government ignorance and secrecy, and the notion of conspiracies, during the second half of the 1960s; it was also a genuinely creepy show at times, going regularly into territory that
The Twilight Zone and
The Outer Limits usually only brushed up against.
Cohen's writing took him into the areas of suspense (
Daddy's Gone A-Hunting) and satire (Call Holme) in film and television, and he made his directorial debut in 1972 with
Bone, an extraordinary satirical thriller with a strong racial edge, from his own screenplay. A year later, he made the more obvious blaxploitation title
Black Caesar, and followed this up with
Hell up in Harlem, both of which were very successful -- meanwhile, he continued to develop new series, including
Cool Million. He just missed getting a successful series on the air with
Griff, starring
Lorne Greene as a retired cop forced to take over his son's detective agency after the latter's murder, but the NBC network delayed the series for too long waiting for Greene to come off of his work on
Bonanza, and in the interim the virtually identical
Barnaby Jones stole a march on Cohen's series for CBS.
Cohen was still writing for television, including episodes of
Columbo (including the classic "Candidate for Crime," starring
Jackie Cooper), when he went into production on the movie that would establish him as a serious horror director. It's Alive! (1974), from Cohen's own script, touched on numerous sensitive psychological points in its tale of a mutant killer-newborn, becoming not only a huge box-office success but a major cult favorite, eclipsed only by
John Carpenter's
Halloween a little later in the decade. Cohen followed this with
God Told Me To (aka
Demon, 1976) and The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover (1977). The latter, although considered the height of camp at the time of its release, did nothing to hurt Cohen's reputation among a new generation of film buffs and enthusiasts, who took to its low-budget depiction of the longtime FBI director's secret life, and ultimately came to be taken much more seriously. The film also showed, more than any other up to that time, Cohen's unusual sensibilities when it came to choosing actors and creative talent.
Broderick Crawford, whose movie career dated back to the 1930s, played the title role, and former blacklistees
Howard Da Silva portrayed Franklin Roosevelt and
Lloyd Gough appeared in the guise of Walter Winchell, while
Miklos Rozsa, who had scored the 1939
Four Feathers wrote the soundtrack.
From the outset of his career as a producer, Cohen looked for old Hollywood hands to work on his movies, as a matter of drawing on their expertise and experience and also acknowledging his own debt to their work -- he had even engaged
Bernard Herrmann to write the score for
It's Alive, which proved to be a selling point for the movie among more serious filmgoers. There followed a sequel to
It's Alive,
It Lives Again (1978), and then
Ghost Story (1981), and then the screenplay to the almost mainstream I, the Jury (1982). But Cohen was back on form that same year with Q: The Winged Serpent, about a giant flying lizard beheading people in contemporary Manhattan. During the 1980s, he moved between horror and satire, even mixing the two in
The Stuff (1985), a horror movie that was also a yogurt-maker's worst nightmare. Cohen wrote, produced, and directed some high-profile sequels (
It's Alive 3,
A Return to Salem's Lot) for television and theaters, and started another "franchise" with
Maniac Cop (1988) as a producer and screenwriter. A year later, he directed The Wicked Stepmother, which became
Bette Davis' final film (and employed ex-blacklistee
Lionel Stander) as well as Hollywood veteran
Evelyn Keyes.
Cohen's theatrical output slackened a bit in the 1990s, a period in which he did two
Maniac Cop sequels and returned to television series work for the first time in years, with an episode of
NYPD Blue ("Dirty Socks," which introduced the character of gay police aide John Irvin, played by
Bill Brochtrup). Most of his film projects from the 1990s onward have been direct-to-video releases -- and video rescued the fate of The Wicked Stepmother, hampered by the presence of an aging and ailing
Bette Davis, when Cohen correctly predicted that even if it bombed theatrically, the fact that every video store had a
Bette Davis section would ensure its success; but Cohen work also keeps getting revived and unearthed by new generations of viewers and producers, and its best attributes keep rising to the surface -- there was still, as of 2005, talk of adapting
The Invaders as a feature film, and Coronet Blue was mentioned on the pages of the New York Times in 2004, 37 years after it was last seen. In that regard, Cohen has achieved a level of ongoing, seemingly constantly renewing success and recognition -- for old and new projects -- that is unique in his generation. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide