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Val Kilmer, Top Gun Actor and One-Time Batman, Dead at 65

Val Kilmer, Top Gun Actor and One-Time Batman, Dead at 65

Yahoo02-04-2025

The post Val Kilmer, Top Gun Actor and One-Time Batman, Dead at 65 appeared first on Consequence.
Val Kilmer, the actor known for playing Iceman in Top Gun, Jim Morrison in The Doors, and the Caped Crusader in Batman Forever, has died at age 65.
News of Kilmer's passing was confirmed by his daughter Mercedes Kilmer, who told the Associated Press that the actor died of pneumonia on Tuesday night in Los Angeles, surrounded by friends and family.
Val Edward Kilmer was born on December 31st, 1959 in Los Angeles. Despite becoming one of the biggest movie stars of the 1980s and '90s, he began his career in theater, starring in productions of Orestes and in The Wood Demon as a student at Juilliard. He was so committed to being a proper thespian that he turned down a role in The Outsiders to attend to prior theater engagements — though acting alongside Kevin Bacon, Sean Penn, and Jackie Earle Haley in an Off Broadway production of The Slab Boys proved to be a catch in itself.
In 1984, Kilmer appeared in the spy movie spoof Top Secret!, where his striking good looks and acting talent quickly joined forces to make him the 1980s man to cast. He followed it up with Real Genius, then appeared alongside Tom Cruise in the 1986 smash Top Gun. He played Tom 'Iceman' Kazansky, Maverick's rival-turned-wingman, in the film, which grossed $344 million worldwide (and spawned a zeitgeist-shaping sequel nearly four decades later).
Thanks to Top Gun, Kilmer graduated from supporting character actor to leading man. He starred alongside his future wife, Joanne Whalley, in the 1988 fantasy Willow, and again in 1989's Kill Me Again. In 1991, he portrayed Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's biopic The Doors. Despite his rising star power, the film laid the groundwork for a new reputation for Kilmer as a 'difficult' actor. He famously debated Stone about whether or not the biopic should depict Morrison's drug use, adamantly arguing that he did not want to glamorize addiction. Committed to the method acting process, he became so aggressive with a woman during his audition for the project that the two reached a financial settlement.
Kilmer starred in several more films in the early '90s, including Thunderheart, The Real McCoy, True Romance, and Tombstone. In 1995, he took over the role of Batman from Michael Keaton for Batman Forever. When he didn't return for its follow-up, many speculated there was tension between the actor and director Joel Schumacher.
The actor appeared in features like The Ghost and the Darkness, The Saint, At First Sight, Wonderland, The Missing, Spartan, and Alexander before his years-long tussle with fame — and his co-stars — led him away from the spotlight and back to supporting film roles, theater work, and television. He spent years creating the one-man show Citizen Twain, about Christian Science founder Mary Baker Eddy and one of her biggest critics, Mark Twain. Both figures were two of his biggest influences, an oxymoron not unlike his love for acting and discomfort with leading man success.
In 2015, Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer — a prognosis he long denied, per his Christian Science faith. At the behest of his family, he underwent radiation, chemotherapy, and a procedure on his trachea that reduced his voice to a rasp and required ongoing use of a feeding tube. When he reprised his role as Iceman in 2022's Top Gun: Maverick, he enlisted the help of an artificial intelligence company to replicate his voice.
Val, a documentary about the actor's life, premiered in 2021.
Val Kilmer, Top Gun Actor and One-Time Batman, Dead at 65 Carys Anderson
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Everything to know about Zohran Mamdani: Background, parents, platform
Everything to know about Zohran Mamdani: Background, parents, platform

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Everything to know about Zohran Mamdani: Background, parents, platform

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With ‘F1,' mega-producer Jerry Bruckheimer is still in the driver's seat
With ‘F1,' mega-producer Jerry Bruckheimer is still in the driver's seat

Los Angeles Times

time10 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

With ‘F1,' mega-producer Jerry Bruckheimer is still in the driver's seat

The first thing you notice in Jerry Bruckheimer's Santa Monica office isn't the full-size suit of armor from 2004's 'King Arthur' or the shelves lined with awards and celebrity photos. It's the pens: dozens of ornate Montblancs, carefully arranged in display cases. His wife gives them to him, Bruckheimer explains dryly. After nearly half a century of hits, what do you give the guy who has everything? 'I sometimes write thank-you notes with them,' he says. Alongside neatly stacked copies of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times — which he says he still reads daily, in print — the pens reflect something ingrained in the legendary producer, a fondness for ritual, precision and old-school order. Now 81, at an age when most of his peers are content to reflect on past glories in between tee times and early-bird specials, Bruckheimer still starts each day with a rigorous workout. ('I pick hotels based on the gym,' he says.) 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That philosophy is on full display in his latest production, 'F1,' an adrenaline-fueled racing drama starring Brad Pitt as a retired Formula One driver lured back to the track to mentor a young phenom (Damson Idris) on a struggling team. Shot during actual Formula One races across Europe and the Middle East, and with a budget north of $200 million, 'F1' speeds into theaters Friday with the kind of high-stakes ambition only someone with Bruckheimer's track record could pull off. From the outset, the project, which reunites Bruckheimer with 'Top Gun: Maverick' director Joseph Kosinski and screenwriter Ehren Kruger, sparked a bidding war among virtually every studio and streamer, ultimately landing as a co-production between Apple and Warner Bros. 'One of the reasons I went to Jerry,' says Kosinski by phone from his car, 'is because I knew I was asking two massive corporations — Apple and Formula One — to work together. They're both incredibly specific about their brands and how they do things. It took someone with Jerry's CEO style of producing to be the diplomat in the middle and actually make it happen. He's seen it all.' Bruckheimer attributes the early frenzy around the project to the package's pedigree: an appealing story, an A-list star and the global popularity of Formula One. But for Bruckheimer, it's not just about star power or scale. 'It's emotional, it's exciting, it's got romance, it's got humor,' he says. 'It's the reason I got into this business — to make movies that thrill you on that big screen, that you walk out feeling you've been on a real journey and got lost for a couple of hours. That's the goal every time.' Pitt's character, Sonny, is in some ways a reflection of Bruckheimer: a seasoned pro forever chasing one more victory out of a sheer love of the chase. 'Jerry could easily be on an island somewhere relaxing,' says Kosinski. 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In addition to big-budget tentpoles, he has occasionally championed more grounded, character-driven fare, from 'Dangerous Minds' and 'Black Hawk Down' to the recent Disney+ biopic 'Young Woman and the Sea.' But for all his success, he has never stopped looking for the next story. A new 'Top Gun' script is underway. 'Days of Thunder' may get another lap. Even 'Pirates of the Caribbean' is back in motion. Bruckheimer ultimately credits the directors and actors — and the tight-knit team at his company — with keeping him in the game. 'I'm just the guy who says, 'You're really talented. I want to work with you.' ' Even as a kid, he says, that was his gift. 'I can't focus the way a director or writer focuses — I'm too ADD. But I always put things together. I put together a baseball team and a hockey team when I was very young. I always had the ability gather to people around a common cause.' As for thoughts of his legacy, he demurs. 'I'm sure I'll be remembered somewhere along there — maybe not, maybe yes,' he says. 'I'm still working picture to picture. You're only as good as your last movie. So you better be on your toes.'

Shane Gillis to host ESPN's award ceremony, the ESPYS
Shane Gillis to host ESPN's award ceremony, the ESPYS

Fox Sports

timea day ago

  • Fox Sports

Shane Gillis to host ESPN's award ceremony, the ESPYS

Associated Press LOS ANGELES (AP) — Shane Gills will host ESPN's annual awards show, the ESPYS, the network announced Tuesday. The ceremony, which honors the top athletes and sports moments of the past year, will be held in Los Angeles on July 16 and broadcast live on ESPN. The 37-year-old Gillis is one of the nation's most successful touring comics and the creator and star of the Netflix series 'Tires.' He also hosts 'Matt and Shane's Secret Podcast' with fellow comedian Matt McCusker. 'I'm excited to be at the ESPYS this year,' Gillis said in a statement. 'I like sports so this should be a good time.' The ESPYS began in 1993 and benefit the V Foundation for Cancer Research, the charity founded by ESPN and the late basketball coach Jim Valvano at the first ESPYS ceremony. ___ AP sports: in this topic

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