Julie Ann Corman (born (1942-06-22)June 22, 1942) is an American film producer.
Corman has produced several other family films: The Dirt Bike Kid, starring Peter Billingsley; Max is Missing, shot at Machu Picchu in Peru; and Legend of the Lost Tomb, based on Walter Dean Myers’s book Tales of a Dead King and shot in Egypt.
She made a series of wilderness films: White Wolves: A Cry in the Wild II, starring Mark-Paul Gosselaar and White Wolves II: Legend of the Wild, starring Elizabeth Berkley, Corin Nemec, Justin Whalin and Jeremy London.
The Academy of Family Film and Television named her “Producer of the Year” for her achievements in 1996.
[4] According to Filmink magazine, Julie Corman had an underappreciated influence on her husband's output: She produced some of New World’s strongest femme driven films (Summer School Teachers, Lady in Red), the best movies made by Jim Wynorski (Chopping Mall) and Barbara Peeters (Summer School Teachers), and early films from Martin Scorsese (Boxcar Bertha) and Jonathan Kaplan (Night Call Nurses, The Student Teachers); she tried to get Shirley Clarke on to direct Crazy Mama...she encouraged Roger to diversify his slate into kids’ films (The Dirt Bike Kid, A Cry in the Wind), broad comedies (Saturday the 14th...) and Irish drama (Da); it was she, rather than Roger, who took artistic swings during the New Horizon years (Nightfall, Brain Dead).