Producer Jon Landau, James Cameron’s Right-Hand Man on ‘Titanic’ and the ‘Avatar’ Films, Dies at 63

Producer Jon Landau, James Cameron’s Right-Hand Man on ‘Titanic’ and the ‘Avatar’ Films, Dies at 63


Producer Jon Landau, James Cameron’s Right-Hand Man on ‘Titanic’ and the ‘Avatar’ Films, Dies at 63, Jon Landau, the Oscar-winning producer who made the dreams of James Cameron come to life by overcoming extreme logistical challenges to bring the filmmaker’s Titanic and Avatar blockbusters to the big screen, has died. He was 63.



Landau’s son Jamie Landau confirmed his death to The Hollywood Reporter. He died Friday in Los Angeles after 16-month battle with cancer, a Disney spokesperson said.

More from The Hollywood Reporter

Judy Belushi-Pisano, Actress and Widow of John Belushi, Dies at 73

Mike Heslin, Actor in 'Lioness' and 'The Holiday Proposal Plan,' Dies at 30

Robert Towne, Oscar-Winning 'Chinatown' Screenwriter, Dies at 89

A son of producers — his father was an Oscar nominee — the passionate Landau produced films including Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989) and Dick Tracy (1990) before spending some five years as an executive at Fox, where he oversaw production on Die Hard 2 (1990), The Last of the Mohicans (1992), Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) and Cameron’s True Lies (1994).

If Cameron had a problem on Arnold Schwarzenegger’s True Lies, he was told by then-Fox Filmed Entertainment head Peter Chernin, “Don’t call me, deal with Jon,” Landau recalled in a 2011 interview. He spent four months on location in the Florida Keys with the director.

When Landau decided to leave Fox to return to producing, he said he had offers from three directors to collaborate on their next projects. He decided to go with Cameron, who wanted to make a movie code-named “Planet Ice.” That, of course, would turn out to be Titanic (1997).

Landau supervised the 100-day construction of Fox Baja Studios, the 40-acre oceanfront facility in Rosarito Beach, Mexico, that housed huge movie sets, the largest shooting tank in the world and five soundstages, one about the size of a football field.

He had to rewrite the film’s entire production schedule when it was determined that the main exterior of their R.M.S. Titanic was going to take two months longer to build than planned. Meanwhile, the film’s original $120 million budget had ballooned beyond $200 million.

“There was a lot of pressure throughout the course of filming and throughout postproduction and prerelease,” Landau told the Los Angeles Times in 1998.

Fox, which was financing the film with Paramount, “was very tough but rightfully so. And I was the guy who I believe got the brunt of it. It was very difficult because I wanted to please all three masters: the studio, the director and the movie. And it was my job to balance that … to not lose sight of that.”

It all worked out when Titanic, which opened on Dec. 19, 1997, nabbed the top spot at the box office for a remarkable 15 consecutive weeks en route to grossing $1.84 billion worldwide in its initial run, easily sailing past previous record holder Jurassic Park (1993). Subsequent releases over the years raised its box office tally to $2.3 billion. (Read THR’s original review here.)

The love story/disaster epic also collected a record-tying 11 Academy Awards — Landau and Cameron shared the best picture prize — off another record-tying 14 nominations. At the podium at the Shrine Auditorium on Oscar night, Landau might have set another record, for the number of people thanked.Cameron had written a treatment of about 100 pages in 1994, but the visual effects technology to adequately bring the Na’vi denizens of Pandora to the screen (at least in Cameron’s mind) did not exist. It would take the filmmaker, New Zealand’s Weta Digital and others years to get to that, and principal photography would not begin until 2007.

With an official budget of $237 million — some estimates put it beyond $300 million — Fox’s Avatar, made in 3D, premiered in London on Dec. 10, 2009. With its initial run of $2.7 billion, it bested Titanic to become the highest-grossing film of all time (with rereleases, its gross now stands at $2.92 billion). (Here’s THR’s original review.)

Thirteen years later came Disney’s Avatar: The Way of Water (2022), with its extensive effects, underwater shoots, pandemic challenges and $2.3 billion gross. The two Avatar pictures collectively won four Oscars, with Landau and Cameron picking up two more best picture noms.

“If one of Cameron’s superpowers is the depth of his focus, that focus is partly made possible because Landau is somewhere nearby, with one Airpod sticking out of his ear, simultaneously having a phone conversation with Burbank about one deadline and an in-person conversation with a crewmember in Wellington [the New Zealand home of Weta] about another,” Rebecca Keegan wrote for a THR cover story in 2022.

“I’ve seen an evolution of him,” Landau told her about Cameron. “Jim learns from every one of his experiences. He looks back and goes, ‘This is what worked, this is what didn’t work, how do I make it better?'”

As Landau was in the middle of this sentence, Keegan wrote, “There was a hard knock on his office door, and Cameron pops in, Kramer-style. ‘Did he tell you we’re like an old married couple?’ I don’t want to say nice things in front of him — it’ll go to his head — but I feel like there’s no problem we can’t solve.”

Landau was born in New York on July 23, 1960. His parents, Ely A. Landau and Edie Landau, owned Manhattan movie houses, founded the American Film Theater and produced more than a dozen films, including Long Day’s Journey Into Night (1962), The Pawnbroker (1965), The Iceman Cometh (1973) and The Chosen (1981).

(In 1971, Ely received an Oscar nom for the documentary King: A Filmed Record … Montgomery to Memphis. After his death in 1993, Edie had a long relationship with actor Martin E. Brooks.)

Landau played football at his Bronx high school before he and his family moved to L.A.’s Brentwood neighborhood in his junior year. He helped out on The Chosen while attending the USC School of Cinematic Arts and after graduation in 1983 returned to New York to work as a set production assistant, mostly directing traffic, on a TV movie of the week.

When that was done, he was offered a chance to do some filing work in accounting. “I had no interest in accounting and certainly had no interest in filing, but I said yes,” he noted. “I read everything I filed. I don’t know that I was supposed to, but I did. I learned [a lot] in those two weeks.”

He then served as a production supervisor on Beat Street (1984), a break-dance movie, and Key Exchange (1985), a romantic comedy, and as a production manager on F/X (1986), Manhunter (1986) and Making Mr. Right (1987).

Landau received his first producer credit on Paramount’s Campus Man (1987), then co-produced two Disney films, Joe Johnston’s Honey I Shrunk the Kids and Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy.

At just 28 in 1989, he was hired to oversee physical production at Fox. “I really looked at this as a great opportunity to see how the industry works from the inside out,” he said.

Landau rose to executive vp at the studio as he also supervised Home Alone (1990), Aliens 3 (1992), Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie (1995) and the Cameron-produced Strange Days (1995).

Post a Comment

0 Comments