NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Ron Cobb, an artist and movie production designer known for his work on the spaceship in Alien, the DeLorean in Back to the Future and some tipsy aliens in Star Wars, died Monday in Sydney.
He was 83. His death was confirmed by his wife, Robin Love. The cause was Lewy body dementia.
Cobb, a self-taught designer who worked largely behind the scenes, advanced an aesthetic that still influences the spaceships and time machines of todays science fiction films: futuristic yet retro, modular but boundless, and bursting with meticulous detail.
He was hugely influential to myself and many of my peers in the business, said François Audouy, the production designer behind the 2019 movie Ford v Ferrari and the forthcoming Ghostbusters: Afterlife.
His drawings were so infused with logic and realism, Audouy said. It just felt like his spaceships could take off at any moment.
Ron was such an exuberant fellow, said Jim Bissell, a longtime friend of Cobbs who was the production designer behind movies including E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial in 1982 and Jumanji in 1995. He had a curiosity about everything. Despite the fact that he had just a high school education, he was one of the smartest guys I knew.
Ronald Ray Cobb was born in Los Angeles on Sept. 21, 1937. He graduated from Burbank High School in 1955 and did some animation work for Walt Disney Studios, according to his website, along with a series of odd jobs.
Cobb served with the U.S. Army Signal Corps, going to Vietnam in 1963, before he returned to California and began submitting political cartoons for The Los Angeles Free Press, an underground newspaper, in the mid-1960s. His comics, which were syndicated globally, tackled themes that included militarization, racism and nuclear annihilation.
Cobbs work earned him an invitation from Love, then a member of the Australian Union of Students, to tour in Australia. The two met on that tour, married in 1973 and moved to Los Angeles. Love said that she bought a small restaurant and supported the two of them for their first few years back in the United States.
Cobb began to pick up more movie work. He created some creatures that appeared in the cantina scene of Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope in 1977. He was also asked to help with spaceship illustrations for a movie pitch that would eventually become the 1979 blockbuster Alien, starring Sigourney Weaver.
Cobbs work has appeared in several movies that have become classics of science fiction and fantasy. He designed scenes and costumes for the 1982 movie Conan the Barbarian. And he was a consultant for Back to the Future in 1985, helping to design the famous DeLorean time machine that transported Marty McFly, the character played by Michael J. Fox, back and forth through time.
He was passionate about making the science correct, Love said. He wanted accurate science, and he wanted great design.
Bissell said Cobb devoured knowledge wherever he could find it and shared books on subjects including philosophy, technology and evolution. Heres a guy who actually just never cared about money, Bissell said. He always just cared about his work.
In a 1988 interview with The Los Angeles Times, Cobb said that around 1980, Steven Spielberg had asked whether he could direct a film even though he had no directing experience. How many people does that happen to? Cobb was reported as saying.
As originally conceived, the film was to focus on a group of aliens. But the concept evolved to focus instead on a single abandoned extraterrestrial. That 1982 movie, E.T., was ultimately directed by Spielberg.
But Cobb was not bothered by the fact that he did not direct that movie. He thought it was too cute, Love said. It wasnt his bag.
Still, Cobb made some money after Love noticed clauses in his contract that he had overlooked: a kill fee and a contractual share of profits. It was a welcome surprise for Cobb, whose income stream had been spotty, and it helped to keep his family financially afloat for years.
Audouy worked with Cobb on The 6th Day, a 2000 movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. He remembered Cobb as a meditative but gregarious designer who created gorgeous drawings, with stunning attention to detail and copious notes.
He was a master craftsman, Audouy said. And I think he made this connection with the filmmakers and the writers because he loved to talk about science, technology, extraterrestrials, why were here, and all of that. He was one of the most interesting people to speak to, ever.
Cobb spent the last few years of his life in Sydney. In addition to his wife, he is survived by their son, Nicholas.
In the 1988 interview, Cobb said he loved making myths.
Film offers me an opportunity to do all these things, he said. I can do the architecture. I can do the sets. I can express my interest in technology. I can express my interest in story, plot and character, the psychology of the characters. Film is very satisfying.
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