Your Hollywood Minute
Comments to "Your Hollywood Minute":
drawnasunder | January 22, 2008, 7:18pm | #
damn, just watched him in the batman preview.javier | January 22, 2008, 7:22pm | #
I'm going for juno. It was the only one of the movies i have seen.very matter of factly on ledger's death. that's cold.
Brian Doherty | January 22, 2008, 7:33pm | #
I guess that sounds cold. He was great in I'M NOT THERE, and looks great from the previews in DARK NIGHT. Just reporting the news on that one, not really feeling fit to eulogize myself.javier | January 22, 2008, 7:37pm | #
I was just giving crap. I could care less.Homophobic Yahweh | January 22, 2008, 7:45pm | #
Jake Gyllenhall is next.The Ron Paul Hollywood Report | January 22, 2008, 7:54pm | #
It's hard to decide which of Ledger's films God slew him for. A Knights Tale, which glorified identity theft in medieval England? Monster's Ball, which lent legitimacy to miscegenation? The Four Feathers, which harshly portrayed England's attempt to civilize East Africa? Or 10 Things I Hate About You, which just sucked?Is it too early? | January 22, 2008, 7:55pm | #
I heard the cause of death was Vertebral Fracture.LevStrauss | January 22, 2008, 7:56pm | #
Yeah, let's go wild. I don't know who will win the Oscars, not a big fan of movies, and Heath Ledger is dead.concerned parent | January 22, 2008, 8:01pm | #
I hope there is a thorough investigation of the Doctor who prescribed the poison that killed such a promising young man. They should increase the penalties for illegal possession of these drugs as well. federal crime, call it the Heath's Law so that he will acomplish something positive in his sensless death.Pendulum | January 22, 2008, 8:12pm | #
What's wrong with you all?A young man died. He had a child, loved ones, and hopes and dreams.
You really ought to avoid letting the world know how deeply perverted your sense of humanity is, by letting these occasions pass without your comment.
Les | January 22, 2008, 8:12pm | #
yoshi,nostar was being funny (or should I say, "hilarious!") because Ledger once portrayed a gay man. Get it? Gay man? AIDS? It helps if you're in junior high.
ed | January 22, 2008, 8:45pm | #
Coldly reporting a human's death, as an aside, is where we are at this point.Long live the intertubes! Are we not...um...what are we, exactly?
crimethink | January 22, 2008, 9:03pm | #
Good to see the self-righteousness brigade is out in force this lovely evening. Blog threads aren't generally the place to go for condolences or eulogies.crimethink | January 22, 2008, 9:04pm | #
Oh yeah, Yahweh and the RPHR were me, before anyone accuses me of hiding behind aliases.LevStrauss | January 22, 2008, 9:24pm | #
But really if you think about Heath, the choices of his agent, and his collection of work, was he not at times one of the greatest at unintentional comedy? I see the majority of these comments, "aids" you're on your own, and even the blog post itself seems to capture this comedic sentiment. I should say there is no better way to honor him. Not all funerals have to be sad, I hear down in New Orleans they aren't solemn at all during funerals, so we don't have to be solemn either, because as Brian Doherty so eloquently stated, "Heath Ledger is dead."Franklin Harris | January 22, 2008, 9:31pm | #
You know it's a crappy Oscar year when a paint-by-numbers, corporations-are-EEEEVIIIILLL flick like Michael Clayton racks up seven nominations.Kolohe | January 22, 2008, 9:54pm | #
10 things was literally shakespeare compared to that horrid 'horror' he made with the same woman that was in knight's taleand for a teen comedy it's light years ahead of current crop of american pie / porky's wannabes. The only thing better in genre in the past two decades were the Cusak trilogy and Clueless.
Kolohe | January 22, 2008, 9:56pm | #
and knight's tale is the most underated movie of this decade, albeit mostly for the writing and supporting cast. (Ledger did hold his own, though)crimethink | January 22, 2008, 10:50pm | #
I actually liked A Knight's Tale and Four Feathers, too. But Monster's Ball and of course Brokeback Mountin' were mediocre films at best that just happened to excel in finding all of PC critics' G-Spots.Dan | January 23, 2008, 12:41am | #
Michael Clayton is NOT actually a paint-by-numbers corporations-are-evil flick. It really doesn't have all that strong of a message about corporations in general - mostly just the specific decisions of Tilda Swinton's character. It's really about the lengths that some people will go to - and others won't - in order to advance (or protect) their career.Les | January 23, 2008, 2:05am | #
But Monster's Ball and of course Brokeback Mountin' were mediocre films at best that just happened to excel in finding all of PC critics' G-Spots.I have to strongly disagree. PC doesn't enter into it. It's fine that you didn't like them, of course, but for many people like me (who've spent a lifetime studying acting and the theater) and people unlike me (people who never studied either), those movies are emotionally profound experiences. Ang Lee's work on "Brokeback Mountain" is simply beautiful and sublime and timeless. So is Heath Ledger's. I know of no other actor in his twenties who parallels his understanding of the craft.
I know of no other actor with more talent and he's dead at 28. That's a sad thing for many people.
Les | January 23, 2008, 2:08am | #
You know it's a crappy Oscar year when a paint-by-numbers, corporations-are-EEEEVIIIILLL flick like Michael Clayton racks up seven nominations.Those are no worse than the paint-by-numbers, government-is-EEEEVIIIILLL flicks.
gambi | January 23, 2008, 7:28am | #
Franklin,My sentiments exactly. Michael Clayton had some good acting and one interesting/nonverbal scene on the hill with Clooney and the horses, but the rest was just the usual "corporations are evil baloney." And of course, it wasn't just about the lengths some people will go to. It's based on John Grisham story, which basically has the same theme - little guys good, corporations bad. Never mind that some little guys put all their savings into corporations so the corporations better protect those investments as responsibly as possible. But such nuance is beyond lowbrows like Grisham.
sixfootpole | January 23, 2008, 9:39am | #
This is sickest, sorriest bunch of commenters on the web. What is wrong with you people? I thought this site appealed to a more intelligent reader. Jeez.brotherben | January 23, 2008, 10:04am | #
"one interesting/nonverbal scene on the hill with Clooney and the horses, "HMMMMMMM
Crimethink,
didn't realize I been brayin to you all these years. king of kings and all that. yeah.......right
Jake Boone | January 23, 2008, 11:44am | #
We all react to death in our own ways. Some laugh, some cry, some rage against their own inevitable demises. Personally, I prefer to laugh. And I hope when my time comes, others can see something ludicrous in some aspect of my death, so that they can laugh as well, and celebrate the fact that, unlike me, they are still alive.It's not sick to laugh at death. It's normal, it's human, and, I suspect, it's healthy.
