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Tobe Hooper, ‘Texas Chain Saw Massacre’ director, dies at 74

Tobe Hooper. Ludovic Kazeba/REX/Shutterstock

LOS ANGELES – Tobe Hooper, the horror-movie pioneer whose low-budget sensation The Texas Chain Saw Massacre took a buzz saw to audiences with its brutally frightful vision, has died. He was 74.

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The Los Angeles County coroner’s office says Hooper died Saturday in the Sherman Oaks area of Los Angeles. It was reported as a natural death.

READ MORE: ‘Texas Chain Saw Massacre’ star Marilyn Burns dies at 65

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Hooper and contemporaries like George Romero crafted some of the scariest nightmares that ever haunted moviegoers. He directed 1982’s Poltergeist from a script by Steven Spielberg and was behind the 1979 miniseries Salem’s Lot, from Stephen King‘s novel.

READ MORE: 13 horror movies for Halloween that are actually scary

But Hooper was best known for 1974’s The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. Made for less than $300,000, the tale of the Texas cannibal Leatherface inspired an entire genre of horror films.

A host of directors expressed their sadness on Twitter upon hearing the news.

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