
Golan mini-Biography at the IMBb

Menahem
Golan: "If you make an American film with a beginning, a
middle and an end, with a budget of less than five million dollars, you
must be an idiot to lose money."
Biography
for Menahem Golan
Date
of Birth: 31 May 1929, Tiberias, Palestine (now Israel)
Mini
Biography
Menahem Golan was born Menahem Globus to parents of Polish decent
in Tiberias, Israel, in May 1929.
In his early years, he was a pilot for the fledgling Israeli Air Force,
changing his surname to Golan for patriotic reasons in 1948. A few years later,
he took the first step towards his future career by attending the Old Vic Theatre School in London. After
returning to Israel, he produced
for theater, until joining producer Roger Corman as an assistant on The Young
Racers (1963). Golan's debut film in partnership with his younger cousin Yoram
Globus was El Dorado (1963). The
two cousins set up Noah Films to produce for the Israeli market. Golan's role
was as producer and the creative partner, with Globus as the financial expert.
The company was first recognized overseas when its production Sallah Shabati
(1964) won an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film and then won the
Golden Globe in the same category in 1965. However, the cousins were desperate
to break into the international market. Some of their films had been picked up
for distribution in America, such as
Kazablan (1974) by MGM, but this was not enough.
In 1979 the pair bought control of a failing production company,
The Cannon Group Inc., from Dennis Friedland and Christopher C. Dewey, and it
was this company that gave them international renown. Under their control, the
Cannon Group grew from a small company making a few obscure pictures a year to
a studio that produced 35 pictures in 1987 alone. They developed a large,
independent, and international empire, with production, distribution, and
exhibition interests across Europe. Golan and
Globus hit their peak with Cannon in the mid-1980s, signing Sylvester Stallone
for a record US$13 million in 1983 for Over the Top (1987) and purchasing the UK's Thorn-EMI
Screen Entertainment in 1986. This last deal led to their ownership of the ABC
cinema circuit and Elstree Studios in Britain. However, by
1987, the money was starting to run out. Many of their movies were not making
enough at the box office despite the cousins' wide cinema ownership, and they
had taken on a lot of debt during their rapid growth, making more expensive
pictures in the process. They were initially rescued by Warner Bros., which
took distribution rights to Cannon's better films--for example, Superman IV:
The Quest for Peace (1987), based on a character that Warner already owned--and
also took an interest in some of its assets. The end of Cannon came in 1989
when, virtually bankrupt, the company was bought by the now-disgraced financier
Giancarlo Parretti and renamed Pathé Communications (after the new MGM-Pathé
collapsed in 1992, Globus produced pictures with Christopher Pearce, which were
released under a resurrected Cannon Pictures label. The last of these was
American Cyborg: Steel Warrior (1993) before the company folded for good).
Golan fell out with Parretti and Globus, leaving Pathé, and starting
21st Century Pictures. He produced a number of films that received widespread
distribution, such as Death Wish V: The Face of Death (1994) and Captain America (1990), but
by the mid-1990s this company had folded, too. Golan's name was later linked
with other new companies, such as International Dynamic Pictures and Magic
Entertainment, and he rejoined cousin Yoram for both. However, the two soon
fell out again and went their separate ways, with Golan writing and directing
for other producers in the interim. Golan's latest company is New Cannon Inc.,
and his recent works include Crime and Punishment (2002) and Shiva MeHodu, Ha-
(2002). Unfortunately for his fans, it now seems unlikely that Golan will
recreate the success of his heyday. Menahem Golan has long been criticized
(sometimes unfairly) for an emphasis on quantity rather than quality. It's true
that some of the movies he has produced have been laughable or unwatchable.
However, now out of the limelight of a critical industry, some of his company's
once-derided films have achieved cult status, such as Mona Lisa (1986), Godfrey
Reggio's Powaqqatsi (1988), and the "Lemon Popsicle" series. Golan's
ongoing drive, energy, and past contribution to the world of cinema will
undoubtedly and belatedly be recognized for the achievement this represents.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Giles Howard
Trivia
Cousin of Yoram Globus.
Along with his cousin, Yoram Globus, bought the Cannon Group
production company in 1979 and ran it throughout the 1980s. Because of their
fast, low-budget style of filmmaking, they earned the nickname the Go-Go Boys.
He and his cousin have also worked with Chuck Norris from
1984-1988. The films were The Missing in Action series (1984, 1985, 1988),
Invasion U.S.A (1985), The Delta Force (1986), Firewalker (1986),and Hero and the Terror (1988).
Personal Quotes
"If you make an
American film with a beginning, a middle and an end,
with a budget of less than five million dollars, you must be an idiot to lose
money."
"The film business
is the only business where a negative is a positive."
Originally posted here http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0324875/bio
October 2007
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