Dan Goozee, the acclaimed artist who created posters for such films as Clash of the Titans, Superman IV and the James Bond movies Moonraker, Octopussy and A View to a Kill, has died. He was 80.
Goozee died April 7 at West Hills Hospital & Medical Center of an age-related condition he had battled for two years, his son, Rob, told The Hollywood Reporter.
The unassuming Goozee spent years as a Walt Disney Imagineering theme park consultant, crafting conceptual artwork for Disneyland Paris and Tokyo DisneySea, for Splash Mountain and Big Thunder rides, for the Imagination Pavilion and Seas Pavilion at Epcot and for the Tree of Life attraction at Animal Kingdom.
He also handled effects work for Battlestar Galactica (1978) and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979).
Born in 1943 in Astoria, Oregon, Daniel Goozee worked on weekends at movie theaters that his father and uncle owned and operated in nearby Seaside, then graduated...
Goozee died April 7 at West Hills Hospital & Medical Center of an age-related condition he had battled for two years, his son, Rob, told The Hollywood Reporter.
The unassuming Goozee spent years as a Walt Disney Imagineering theme park consultant, crafting conceptual artwork for Disneyland Paris and Tokyo DisneySea, for Splash Mountain and Big Thunder rides, for the Imagination Pavilion and Seas Pavilion at Epcot and for the Tree of Life attraction at Animal Kingdom.
He also handled effects work for Battlestar Galactica (1978) and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979).
Born in 1943 in Astoria, Oregon, Daniel Goozee worked on weekends at movie theaters that his father and uncle owned and operated in nearby Seaside, then graduated...
- 4/16/2024
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Another Friday has rolled around and you’re all getting ready for the weekend. A nice two day respite in which you can clean the gutters, or mow the lawn, or bury the evidence. Before you get down to all that fun and excitment, wouldn’t you like to look at some movie posters? Sure you would! Hey…where do you think you’re going? I said…sure you would…
I absolutely love the fact that Robby the Robot went on to be his own character. He originally appeared in Forbidden Planet but went on to appear in many more movies and even on TV. Classic 50′s Sci-Fi posters are always amazing and this one for The Invisible Boy is one of my favourites. When I tracked down this much larger version of the poster I was able to notice all sorts of neat little details I hadn’t seen before,...
I absolutely love the fact that Robby the Robot went on to be his own character. He originally appeared in Forbidden Planet but went on to appear in many more movies and even on TV. Classic 50′s Sci-Fi posters are always amazing and this one for The Invisible Boy is one of my favourites. When I tracked down this much larger version of the poster I was able to notice all sorts of neat little details I hadn’t seen before,...
- 11/15/2013
- by Kevin Fraser
- City of Films
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