Brokeback Mountain: Our Community's Common Bond > Heath Ledger Remembrance Forum

Heath Ledger in Vanity Fair; slightly recycled

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Penthesilea:
For those not familiar with the subject matter, here's the picture and accompanying text from Vanity Fair:



http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2009/03/actors-directors-portfolio200903?slide=9

The Hollywood Portfolio

Something Just Clicked

Some of these actor-director teams have a history together—remember Ron Howard and Tom Hanks’s breakthrough, Splash, a quarter-century ago?—while others produced their first mind-melds in 2008. Sam Mendes and Kate Winslet even brought marriage and kids to the Revolutionary Road set. But in each case the chemistry was profound, the effect exponential. From Gus Van Sant and Sean Penn to John Patrick Shanley and Meryl Streep, Annie Leibovitz photographs 10 partnerships that helped generate more than four dozen Oscar nominations this season. Related: Krista Smith goes behind the scenes at the shoots. Plus: Video from the photo shoots.
photographs by Annie Leibovitz March 2009




CHRISTOPHER NOLAN and the late HEATH LEDGER, The Risktakers
One film together: The Dark Knight (2008).
In one of his final TV interviews, viewable online, Heath Ledger can be found refuting any posthumous speculation that the Joker role somehow got inside his head, contributing to the circumstances surrounding his death. “That was the most fun I’ve ever had—probably ever will have—playing a character,” he says, his future-tense prediction all too heartbreakingly accurate. He found a worthy fun-mate in Christopher Nolan, a mind-warp specialist who broke through in 2000 with Memento and successfully rebooted the Batman franchise in 2005 with Batman Begins. “My thoughts [for the Joker] were identical to his,” Ledger said of his director, and the result—a barmy, creepy hybrid of Beetlejuice and Ratso Rizzo—is compellingly odd and worlds apart from Jack Nicholson’s hammy 1989 version. “I believe whatever doesn’t kill you,” Ledger’s Joker says, in a killer entrance line, “simply makes you … stranger.” Hunched and stringy-haired, slathered in Robert Smith–like makeup gone horribly wrong, Ledger is unrecognizable as the man who played Ennis Del Mar in Brokeback Mountain or as the handsome, deep-voiced, Australian-accented 28-year-old he was in real life. As the Joker slouches across the screen, Ledger’s commitment to Nolan’s conception of the role comes off not as some black journey into the depths of the soul but as a hoot. Composite photo: Christopher Nolan photographed in Los Angeles, 2008; Heath Ledger photographed in New York City, 2005.

Monika:
I like the pic. I agee, somewhat weird, but I really like it.

Mikaela:
I like the composite picture too. I see no big difference between this, and the mag printing one photo of each next to each other, which surely was their alternative approach. As long as they're open about what they've done, I'm fine with it and I think it's been respectfully done. By means of the awards season and the Oscar nom, Heath *is* in the middle of the current media hoopla, and there's no getting away from that.

Images get altered for mag purposes all the time surreptitiously and on the sly (think of all the women stars who get the full photoshop treatment and hardly look like themselves afterwards). This manip OTOH seems to be "honest" in visually admitting what's been going on.


(I wonder if Nolan is the one who'll accept the Oscar on Heath's behalf, should he win. After the last few days' goings-on, I'd say it's a fair bet that whoever does the accepting honours, it won't be Christian Bale!)

Mandy21:
I'd never seen that pic of Heath before, so I'm happy to see it.  I wouldn't know Christopher Nolan if I passed him on the street, but as that is the theme of the article -- directors and actors -- I see their point in putting together something they clearly labelled as a composite.  I wouldn't fault them for that.

The Obama cover, however, I thought was just a stupid, embarrassing misjudgment on their part.  Were they trying to save money or something, or was he just too busy to have a fresh picture taken?  Couldn't they have just used any number of them from inauguration day, which I'm sure were available from the AP wire?  I can't quite understand that one, but the Heath one, I would agree with.

Monika:
It´s an interesting pic. It´s almost as if Christopher Nolan with that sober/sad look on his face, is a timetraveller who has travelled back in time, and is watching Heath doing the photoshoot.

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