Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Delta Force Israeli action filmmaker

-

TEL AVIV, Israel — Menahem Golan, a veteran Israeli filmmaker who built an empire on the back of brawny men beating others senseless across a host of 1980s action films, has died in Tel Aviv. He was 85.

Throughout his long career, Golan produced more than 200 movies and directed 25 percent of them. But while others attended the Cannes film festival in tuxedoes, Golan wore rainbow-colored suspenders over his T-shirts and proudly hawked a different type of fare. It was the 1987 film Bloodsport that he produced that introduced American audiences to the face — and kicks — of a then-unknown Jean-Claude Van Damme. He produced Sylvester Stallone’s take as a stone-faced cop in Cobra and later directed him as a truck-driving arm-wrestler in Over The Top. He also produced Charles Bronson’s Death Wish — sequels two through five.

“Schlock is entertainm­ent for the masses,” he told The Associated Press in 1985. “It’s fantasy. Storytelli­ng without challengin­g the mind too much.”

Golan, who died Friday, is survived by his wife and three children.

Born in pre-state Israel as Menahem Globus, Golan was a pilot and bombardier in Israel’s War of Independen­ce in 1948 and got an Oscar nomination for his film Entebbe:

Operation Thunderbol­t, about the daring 1976 Israeli commando raid to rescue hostages held at an airport in Uganda.

The Delta Force, perhaps the most famous film Golan directed and produced, also was inspired by real-life events, based on the 1985 hijacking of a TWA jet to Beirut.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States