Vancouver Sun

Director Cimino faced highs, lows

The Deer Hunter won an Oscar, but Heaven’s Gate deemed a disaster

- ANDREW DALTON

Michael Cimino, the Oscar-winning director whose film The Deer Hunter became one of the great triumphs of Hollywood’s 1970s heyday and whose disastrous Heaven’s Gate helped bring that era to a close, died Saturday.

Cimino was 77. The Los Angeles County coroner’s office said Cimino had been living in Beverly Hills. The circumstan­ces of his death were not released.

Eric Weissmann, a former lawyer of Cimino’s, said friends had been unable to reach Cimino by phone for the past few days and called the police, who found him dead in his bed.

Cimino’s masterpiec­e was 1978’s The Deer Hunter, the story of the Vietnam War’s effect on a steel-working town in Pennsylvan­ia. The film won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director for Cimino. It helped lift the emerging-legend status of Robert De Niro and Meryl Streep. Christophe­r Walken also won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.

“Our work together is something I will always remember. He will be missed,” De Niro said in a statement.

Despite controvers­y over its portrayal of the North Vietnamese and use of the violent game Russian roulette, the film was praised by some critics as the best American movie since The Godfather six years earlier.

“With his visionary approach and attention to every detail, Michael Cimino is forever etched in the history of filmmaking,” Paris Barclay, president of the Directors Guild of America said Sunday.

Cimino’s emerging career then took a U-turn with 1980’s Heaven’s Gate, a Western starring Kris Kristoffer­son and Walken that was a critical and financial disaster.

The film became synonymous with over-budget and out-of-control production­s, and a cautionary tale for giving artistic-minded directors too much power.

Its initial budget of $11.5 million would balloon to $44 million after marketing. While those numbers are meagre by today’s standards, at the time they were enough to hasten the demise of United Artists, and of Cimino’s career. Some say it helped bring down the director-driven renaissanc­e that had fuelled much of the great work of the 1970s, giving way to a business-and-blockbuste­r mentality that would dominate the decades that followed.

“Critics were set up to hate Heaven’s Gate,” said lifelong friend Clint Eastwood. “The picture didn’t work with the public. If it had, it would have been the same as Titanic. Titanic worked, so all is forgiven.”

Cimino became an eccentric figure even for Hollywood, living in solitude, constantly changing his appearance, claiming allergies to both alcohol and sunshine.

Born in New York City, Cimino graduated from Yale in 1961, and he earned a master’s degree from the University of New Haven in 1963, both in painting.

His first film came with 1974’s Thunderbol­t and Lightfoot, a heist picture with Eastwood and Jeff Bridges that led to his landing The Deer Hunter.

Cimino worked only sporadical­ly in the years that followed Heaven’s Gate, and with no success. His remaining films were 1985’s Year of the Dragon, 1987’s The Sicilian, 1990’s Desperate Hours, and 1996’s Sunchaser.

 ?? EDWIN REICHERT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? American director Michael Cimino, seen in 1979, was hailed as a visionary for his 1978 film The Deer Hunter about the aftermath of the Vietnam War. He died Saturday at 77.
EDWIN REICHERT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES American director Michael Cimino, seen in 1979, was hailed as a visionary for his 1978 film The Deer Hunter about the aftermath of the Vietnam War. He died Saturday at 77.

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