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Sunday, April 6, 2025

Val Kilmer, ‘Top Gun’ and Batman star, dies at 65

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4 days ago
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FILE - Val Kilmer poses for a portrait, Jan. 9, 2014, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)

FILE - Val Kilmer poses for a portrait, Jan. 9, 2014, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)

Mark Humphrey

Val Kilmer, the brood­ing, ver­sa­tile ac­tor who played fan favourite Ice­man in “Top Gun,” donned a vo­lu­mi­nous cape as Bat­man in “Bat­man For­ev­er” and por­trayed Jim Mor­ri­son in “The Doors,” has died. He was 65.

Kilmer died Tues­day night in Los An­ge­les, sur­round­ed by fam­i­ly and friends, his daugh­ter, Mer­cedes Kilmer, said in an email to The As­so­ci­at­ed Press. The Times was the first to re­port his death on Tues­day.

Val Kilmer died from pneu­mo­nia. He had re­cov­ered af­ter a 2014 throat can­cer di­ag­no­sis that re­quired two tra­cheotomies.

“I have be­haved poor­ly. I have be­haved brave­ly. I have be­haved bizarrely to some. I de­ny none of this and have no re­grets be­cause I have lost and found parts of my­self that I nev­er knew ex­ist­ed,” he says to­ward the end of “Val,” the 2021 doc­u­men­tary on his ca­reer. “And I am blessed.”

Kilmer, the youngest ac­tor ever ac­cept­ed to the pres­ti­gious Juil­liard School at the time he at­tend­ed, ex­pe­ri­enced the ups and downs of fame more dra­mat­i­cal­ly than most. His break came in 1984’s spy spoof “Top Se­cret!” fol­lowed by the com­e­dy “Re­al Ge­nius” in 1985. Kilmer would lat­er show his com­e­dy chops again in films in­clud­ing “Mac­Gru­ber” and “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.”

His movie ca­reer hit its zenith in the ear­ly 1990s as he made a name for him­self as a dash­ing lead­ing man, star­ring along­side Kurt Rus­sell and Bill Pax­ton in 1993’s “Tomb­stone,” as Elvis’ ghost in “True Ro­mance” and as a bank-rob­bing de­mo­li­tion ex­pert in Michael Mann’s 1995 film “Heat” with Al Pa­ci­no and Robert De Niro.

“While work­ing with Val on ‘Heat’ I al­ways mar­velled at the range, the bril­liant vari­abil­i­ty with­in the pow­er­ful cur­rent of Val’s pos­sess­ing and ex­press­ing char­ac­ter,” di­rec­tor Michael Mann said in a state­ment Tues­day night.

Ac­tor Josh Brolin, a friend of Kilmer, was among oth­ers pay­ing trib­ute.

“You were a smart, chal­leng­ing, brave, uber-cre­ative fire­crack­er,” Brolin wrote on In­sta­gram. “There’s not a lot left of those.”

Kilmer — who took part in the Method branch of Suzu­ki arts train­ing — threw him­self in­to parts. When he played Doc Hol­l­i­day in “Tomb­stone,” he filled his bed with ice for the fi­nal scene to mim­ic the feel­ing of dy­ing from tu­ber­cu­lo­sis. To play Mor­ri­son, he wore leather pants all the time, asked cast­mates and crew to on­ly re­fer to him as Jim Mor­ri­son and blast­ed The Doors for a year.

That in­ten­si­ty al­so gave Kilmer a rep­u­ta­tion that he was dif­fi­cult to work with, some­thing he grudg­ing­ly agreed with lat­er in life, but al­ways de­fend­ing him­self by em­pha­siz­ing art over com­merce.

“In an un­flinch­ing at­tempt to em­pow­er di­rec­tors, ac­tors and oth­er col­lab­o­ra­tors to ho­n­our the truth and essence of each project, an at­tempt to breathe Suzukian life in­to a myr­i­ad of Hol­ly­wood mo­ments, I had been deemed dif­fi­cult and alien­at­ed the head of every ma­jor stu­dio,” he wrote in his mem­oir, “I’m Your Huck­le­ber­ry.”

One of his more icon­ic roles — hot­shot pi­lot Tom “Ice­man” Kazan­sky op­po­site Tom Cruise — al­most didn’t hap­pen. Kilmer was court­ed by di­rec­tor Tony Scott for “Top Gun” but ini­tial­ly baulked. “I didn’t want the part. I didn’t care about the film. The sto­ry didn’t in­ter­est me,” he wrote in his mem­oir. He agreed af­ter be­ing promised that his role would im­prove from the ini­tial script. He would reprise the role in the film’s 2022 se­quel, “Top Gun: Mav­er­ick.”

One ca­reer nadir was play­ing Bat­man in Joel Schu­mach­er’s goofy, gar­ish “Bat­man For­ev­er” with Nicole Kid­man and op­po­site Chris O’Don­nell‘s Robin — be­fore George Clooney took up the man­tle for 1997’s “Bat­man & Robin” and af­ter Michael Keaton played the Dark Knight in 1989’s “Bat­man” and 1992’s “Bat­man Re­turns.”

Janet Maslin in The New York Times said Kilmer was “ham­strung by the straight-man as­pects of the role,” while Roger Ebert dead­panned that he was a “com­plete­ly ac­cept­able” sub­sti­tute for Keaton. Kilmer, who was one and done as Bat­man, blamed much of his per­for­mance on the suit.

“When you’re in it, you can bare­ly move and peo­ple have to help you stand up and sit down,” Kilmer said in “Val,” in lines spo­ken by his son Jack, who voiced the part of his fa­ther in the film be­cause of his in­abil­i­ty to speak. “You al­so can’t hear any­thing and af­ter a while peo­ple stop talk­ing to you, it’s very iso­lat­ing. It was a strug­gle for me to get a per­for­mance past the suit, and it was frus­trat­ing un­til I re­al­ized that my role in the film was just to show up and stand where I was told to.”

His next projects were the film ver­sion of the 1960s TV se­ries “The Saint” — fuss­i­ly putting on wigs, ac­cents and glass­es — and “The Is­land of Dr. More­au” with Mar­lon Bran­do, which be­came one of the decade’s most in­fa­mous­ly cursed pro­duc­tions.

David Gre­go­ry’s 2014 doc­u­men­tary “Lost Soul: The Doomed Jour­ney of Richard Stan­ley’s Is­land of Dr. More­au,” de­scribed a cursed set that in­clud­ed a hur­ri­cane, Kilmer bul­ly­ing di­rec­tor Richard Stan­ley, the fir­ing of Stan­ley via fax (who sneaked back on set as an ex­tra with a mask on) and ex­ten­sive rewrites by Kilmer and Bran­do. The old­er ac­tor told the younger at one point: “‘It’s a job now, Val. A lark. We’ll get through it.’ I was as sad as I’ve ever been on a set,” Kilmer wrote in his mem­oir.

In 1996, En­ter­tain­ment Week­ly ran a cov­er sto­ry about Kilmer ti­tled ″The Man Hol­ly­wood Loves to Hate.″ The di­rec­tors Schu­mach­er and John Franken­heimer, who fin­ished “The Is­land of Dr. More­au,” said he was dif­fi­cult. Franken­heimer said there were two things he would nev­er do: ″Climb Mount Ever­est and work with Val Kilmer again.″

Oth­er artists came to his de­fense, like D. J. Caru­so, who di­rect­ed Kilmer in ″The Salton Sea″ and said the ac­tor sim­ply liked to talk out scenes and en­joyed hav­ing a di­rec­tor’s at­ten­tion.

″Val needs to im­merse him­self in a char­ac­ter. I think what hap­pened with di­rec­tors like Franken­heimer and Schu­mach­er is that Val would ask a lot of ques­tions, and a guy like Schu­mach­er would say, ‘You’re Bat­man! Just go do it,’″ Caru­so told The New York Times in 2002.

Af­ter “The Is­land of Dr. More­au,” the movies were small­er, like David Mamet hu­man-traf­fick­ing thriller “Spar­tan"; ″Joe the King″ in 1999, in which he played a paunchy, abu­sive al­co­holic; and play­ing the doomed ’70s porn star John Holmes in 2003’s “Won­der­land.” He al­so threw him­self in­to his one-man stage show “Cit­i­zen Twain,” in which he played Mark Twain.

“I en­joy the depth and soul the piece has that Twain had for his fel­low man and Amer­i­ca,” he told Va­ri­ety in 2018. “And the com­e­dy that’s al­ways so close to the sur­face, and how valu­able his ge­nius is for us to­day.”

Kilmer spent his for­ma­tive years in the Chatsworth neigh­bour­hood of Los An­ge­les. He at­tend­ed Chatsworth High School along­side fu­ture Os­car win­ner Kevin Spacey and fu­ture Em­my win­ner Mare Win­ning­ham. At 17, he was the youngest dra­ma stu­dent ever ad­mit­ted at the Juil­liard School in 1981.

Short­ly af­ter he left for Juil­liard, his younger broth­er, 15-year-old Wes­ley, suf­fered an epilep­tic seizure in the fam­i­ly’s Jacuzzi and died on the way to the hos­pi­tal. Wes­ley was an as­pir­ing film­mak­er when he died.

″I miss him and miss his things. I have his art up. I like to think about what he would have cre­at­ed. I’m still in­spired by him,″ Kilmer told the Times.

While still at Juil­liard, Kilmer co-wrote and ap­peared in the play “How It All Be­gan” and lat­er turned down a role in Fran­cis Ford Cop­po­la’s “The Out­siders” for the Broad­way play, “Slab Boys,” along­side Kevin Ba­con and Sean Penn.

Kilmer pub­lished two books of po­et­ry (in­clud­ing “My Edens Af­ter Burns”) and was nom­i­nat­ed for a Gram­my in 2012 for spo­ken word al­bum for “The Mark of Zor­ro.” He was al­so a vi­su­al artist and a life­long Chris­t­ian Sci­en­tist.

He dat­ed Cher, mar­ried and di­vorced ac­tor Joanne Whal­ley. He is sur­vived by their two chil­dren, Mer­cedes and Jack.

“I have no re­grets,” Kilmer told the AP in 2021. “I’ve wit­nessed and ex­pe­ri­enced mir­a­cles.”

Kennedy re­port­ed from New York.

LOS AN­GE­LES (AP) —

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