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Maverick director known for offbeat movies
Los Angeles Times
|September 29, 2025
‘Eating,’ ‘Last Summer in the Hamptons’ among the indie filmmaker’s work.
CHRIS PIZZELLO Associated Press
FREEWHEELING STYLE Henry Jaglom turned down pitches from big studios in order to maintain creative control over his idiosyncratic films and keep costs low.
Henry Jaglom, the uncompromising indie filmmaker who eschewed big-budget productions in order to preserve his creative vision, died Monday night. He was 87.
Jaglom died at his Santa Monica home surrounded by his family, his daughter Sabrina Jaglom said. The writer-director, whose filmography includes “Last Summer in the Hamptons” and “Eating,” was known for his intimate, naturalistic style and foregrounding of women’s stories in his work.
Sabrina, also a director, said in a statement that her father was “larger-than-life, and made the world a lot more colorful for those of us lucky enough to know him.”
“But, most of all, he was the most loving and supportive Dad. He will be greatly missed, but impossible to forget,” she said Thursday.
From his earliest directing gigs, Jaglom was committed to creating autobiographically inspired and emotionally resonant stories with as little studio intervention as possible. He kept costs low, cast his friends and family in his movies and pursued an improvisational production style that preceded the early-2000s film genre mumblecore.
“My movies talk about the emotional side of life,” Jaglom told The Times in 2009.
“I just try to have people do what we do, which is sit around, talk, deal with the emotions of life,” he said. “It can be touching, sad, happy, but it allows people to go through some of what they go through in life and not feel isolated and lonely.”
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