Kuwait Times

Val Kilmer documentar­y charts Hollywood rise and fall

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Val Kilmer has made an intriguing and bitterswee­t return to the big screen at the Cannes film festival in a new documentar­y charting his stratosphe­ric rise and later fall in Hollywood through his own home recordings. The Amazon-produced documentar­y “Val” is a tender portrait of the actor, now 61, whose career has seen more ups and downs than the fighter jets in his breakout film “Top Gun”. Most striking is Kilmer’s voice, turned into a near-incomprehe­nsible rasp by treatment for throat cancer.

It has not quite ended his career-he is due to reprise his iconic role as Iceman this autumn in the long-awaited sequel “Top Gun: Maverick”. But the documentar­y shows him as as a shadow of his former self, reduced to a life of signing autographs at convention­s-as he puts it, “selling his old self”. The film draws heavily from Kilmer’s huge library of home videoshe carried a camera with him throughout his life-providing intimate behind-thescenes footage from his hits, including “Tombstone”, “The Doors” and “Batman Forever”.

‘Difficult’ reputation

The Hollywood Reporter described the film as “agile and alive”, and praised the frankness of its star: “How many certified movie stars would allow themselves to be filmed so physically altered, and on the inescapabl­e downslope of an A-list career?” There is a juicy clash with director John Frankenhei­mer on the set of “The Island of Dr Moreau”, a flop that marked the start of his career’s decline in the late 1990s, but the documentar­y mostly downplays his obsessive-and reportedly exasperati­ng-work habits.

“The film-makers sometimes gloss over aspects of Kilmer’s legacy that would have been fascinatin­g to interrogat­e, such as his reputation for being difficult with his directors,” wrote Screen Daily. But it said there was “a fragility to ‘Val’-and not just in Kilmer’s physical presence-that’s unexpected­ly moving.” Kilmer was the youngest person ever accepted to New York’s fabled Juilliard school and longed to make serious films, only to find himself in a series of schlocky blockbuste­rs and expensive flops. “Being difficult was the price he made everyone pay for trapping him in a system he found too little satisfacti­on in,” said Variety.

Chastened by a decade or more of lowbudget movies, Kilmer was mounting a comeback in the 2010s with a successful stage show about Mark Twain that he hoped to turn into a film, when he was struck by cancer. “Yet he now has the aura of a man who was dealt his cosmic comeuppanc­e and came through it,” wrote Variety. “He fell from stardom, maybe from grace, but he did it his way.”— AFP

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