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New York filmmaker Amos Poe dies at 76 after cancer battle

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Dec 26 (Reuters) – Amos Poe, the New York director and screenwriter credited with chronicling the city’s downtown punk movement, died on Thursday at 76 after a battle with an aggressive cancer, his wife and daughter said on social media.

Poe, diagnosed with stage 4 colon cancer in 2022, underwent intensive chemotherapy before moving to home hospice care.

“Amos took his last breath today at 3:33 p.m., surrounded by loved ones,” said Claudia Summers, his wife, on Instagram. A GoFundMe campaign was launched to help offset his medical costs, drawing support from the filmmaking community.

Emily Poe, his daughter, wrote on Facebook: “We said goodbye today to Amos Poe and the world will never be the same.”

LEADING CULTURAL FIGURE, HELPED SHAPE PUNK

Poe was a leading figure in the so-called No Wave cinema of experimental and low-budget filmmaking in the late 1970s and early 1980s, which has influenced today’s world of independent movie making.

Poe was a fixture in New York’s downtown cultural scene, helping shape the punk explosion on the Bowery and documenting it on film. His seminal work, “The Blank Generation”, along with “The Foreigner” and “Subway Riders”, cemented his reputation.

In comments to Reuters in 2011, Poe talked about the emergence of No Wave cinema.

“Our whole aesthetic, or the way we approached it, was that you didn’t necessarily have to have the professionalism or the understanding of making films, you had to have the inspiration and the will to put yourself completely into it.”

In a 2020 profile titled “His Film Is a Punk Classic, but the Credits Now Roll Without Him,” The New York Times said Poe lost control of his music documentary after a dispute with guitarist Ivan Kral.

Poe turned to directing his own features, starting with “Unmade Beds”, a DIY project starring friends Duncan Hannah, Eric Mitchell and Debbie Harry, followed by “The Foreigner” and “Subway Riders”. Alongside contemporaries such as Jim Jarmusch, Abel Ferrara and Vivienne Dick, Poe became a central figure in the No Wave scene.

Janus Films paid tribute on X, posting a black-and-white portrait of Poe in a leather jacket with the caption: “Farewell Amos, Prince of New York.”

“MY STOMACH AND INTESTINES ARE A COLOSSAL MESS”

In 2024, Poe posted from Greece: “My stomach and intestines are a colossal mess. What I needed was to get back to work – but as anyone who’s been in intense, unrelenting pain will tell you, it’s tiring as hell. So a few weeks, a month in the Mediterranean seemed the right prescription … and here we are. The Mrs. and I.”

Tributes poured in from across the industry. U.S. indie director Jarmusch, who called Poe a key influence, and Emmy-winning actor Michael Imperioli, who worked with Poe on “Joey Breaker”, shared condolences on social media.

(Reporting by Mrinmay Dey, Rishabh Jaiswal, Preetika Parashuraman and Nilutpal Timsina in Bengaluru; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus and Neil Fullick)

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