Lake County Record-Bee

Joe Camp (1939–2024), Benji filmmaker

-

Joe Camp was the creator, screenwrit­er, and director behind the beloved “Benji” movie franchise.

He died March 15, 2024 at his home in Bell Buckle, Tennessee, after a long illness at the age of 84.

Joe Camp’s legacy

“Benji” was Camp’s first movie, first imagined while he was watching the animated classic “Lady and the Tramp” and wondering if a similar approach could work for a live-action dog movie. A dog lover, Camp saw his own dog’s facial expression­s and emotions and decided to make the first live-action movie from a dog’s point of view, without a human narrating for the dog. He wrote the script, fundraised, and shot the film, and when major studios didn’t show any interest, he distribute­d it himself, releasing “Benji” in October 1974. The indie film became a smash hit – it was one of the year’s top grossing movies, received critical acclaim, and became a beloved family classic.

Camp went on to make five more Benji feature films, most recently the 2018 Netflix reboot, “Benji,” which he cowrote with his son, Brandon Camp. He placed Benji in several made-for-TV movies and gave him cameo appearance­s in his unrelated feature films, “Hawmps!” and “The Double McGuffin.” Camp even made Benji a sci-fi star in the 1983 Saturday morning TV series “Benji, Zax & the Alien Prince.” The 1980 short “Benji at Work” earned Camp a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Children’s Program. After the success of the first “Benji” film, Camp continued to create and release his films independen­tly, becoming one of the most successful indie directors in movie history.

An animal lover who also had horses, cats, and chickens in addition to dogs, Camp wrote the books “The Soul of a Horse: Life Lessons from the Herd” and “Born Wild: The Journey Continues.” He also wrote several novels and other nonfiction books. He was proud to note that the original dog that played Benji was rescued from a shelter, and the American Humane Associatio­n reported that Benji inspired more than a million adoptions of shelter

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States