Howard W. Koch Movies
An assistant director and second-unit director by the early '50s, Howard Koch helmed his first film in 1954, the bad-cop drama
Shield for Murder, co-directed by its star Edmond O'Brien. A series of genre films followed, most notably the campy women's-prison film
Untamed Youth; the Wages of Fear remake
Violent Road; the horror tale
Frankenstein 1970, with
Boris Karloff; and two films starring
Mickey Rooney,
Andy Hardy Comes Home (the final installment of MGM's durable series) and the death-row drama The Last Mile. Koch began producing in the '50s, making such films as the World War Two drama
Beachhead and the chiller
The Black Sleep. As executive producer for Frank Sinatra Enterprises in the early '60s, Koch made several Sinatra films, most notably
The Manchurian Candidate. His other major efforts as producer include
Theodore J. Flicker's
The President's Analyst,
Vincente Minnelli's
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, the popular haunted romance Ghost, and the
Neil Simon adaptations
The Odd Couple,
Plaza Suite, and
Last of the Red Hot Lovers. ~ Rovi