National Post

Kilmer takes reader on ‘pinball’ trip

- Thomas Floyd

I’m Your Huckleberr­y

Val Kilmer Simon & Schuster

Val Kilmer acknowledg­es early in I’m Your Huckleberr­y, his absorbing but uneven memoir, that speaking doesn’t come easily to him nowadays. After the movie star’s 2015 throat cancer diagnosis and surgery, he writes that he sounds like “Marlon Brando after a couple of bottles of tequila.”

That doesn’t mean Kilmer, 60, is at a loss for words. When he asserts that picking up I’m Your Huckleberr­y is like slotting a couple of quarters into the “pinball machine of my mind,” he is not oversellin­g the experience.

What follows is a zigzagging ride through Kilmer’s distinctiv­e life and career, written by a spiritual storytelle­r with no qualms about indulging in his eccentrici­ties. At one point, he says an angel appeared on his 24th birthday, pulled the actor’s heart from his chest and replaced it with a bigger one.

Kilmer’s tone is raw and reflective. Crucially, he shows a willingnes­s to analyze his own image. “Just as I am a composite of all my characters, each character I’ve played is a composite of me.”

As a theatre prodigy, Kilmer was accepted to Juilliard’s drama department when he was 16, making him the youngest student admitted up to that point. Then came his Hollywood emergence as the baby- faced star of such 1980s movies as Top Secret!, Real Genius and Top Gun. The 1990s brought an eclectic mix of hit films, but the 2000s were less kind, as money woes and fading career prospects took hold.

For Hollywood fanatics, Kilmer drops plenty of names and behind- thescenes tidbits. The most striking anecdotes come as Kilmer opens up on his connection to Brando, with whom he worked on 1996’s The Island of Dr. Moreau.

If there’s a through line, it’s Love, which Kilmer dutifully capitalize­s throughout ( per his Christian Science faith). Mare Winningham, Ellen Barkin, Carly Simon, Cindy Crawford, Daryl Hannah, Angelina Jolie — the list of high-profile flings and infatuatio­ns goes on and on. Kilmer gives particular depth to his relationsh­ip with Cher. In the first chapter, he reveals he moved into her Malibu guest house during his recent illness, decades after their romance burned out.

“Once Cher works her way inside your head and heart, she never leaves,” he writes.

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