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Heath Ledger's Final Performance Screens At Cannes

DAVID GERMAIN   05/22/09 12:55 PM ET   AP

Heath Ledger

CANNES, France — Heath Ledger's zeal roused his co-stars to up their game in his final film, and his death inspired them _ and three A-list friends who completed his role _ to carry on with a story the late actor had wanted to see, director Terry Gilliam said Friday.

As Gilliam's "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus" premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, the filmmaker said Ledger almost co-directed the film.

"Heath was enjoying himself so much, and he was ad-libbing a lot, which I don't normally allow ... but Heath was just brilliant at it, and he got everybody else going," Gilliam said. "Everybody was just energized by Heath. He was extraordinary. He was almost exhausting because he had so much energy.

"That just passed on to everyone else. Everyone's part grew because they were full of Heath's energy," Gilliam said. "What I thought was interesting was to watch people filling the void that Heath left. Everybody was just growing to make sure that there was no void left in the space that Heath had left us."

The movie closes with the dedication: "A film from Heath Ledger and friends."

Ledger's death by an accidental prescription drug overdose on Jan. 22, 2008, left Gilliam with some of the biggest hurdles he has faced in a career filled with tough breaks. Gilliam fought prolonged battles with studio executives over both "Brazil" (1985) and his previous Ledger collaboration "The Brothers Grimm" (2005).

In 2000, Gilliam saw his fantasy epic "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote" shut down after a few days of shooting because of a string of mishaps. On Friday, the director said he would soon restart production on the project.

Gilliam said that, when Ledger died with only about half of his performance for "Doctor Parnassus" filmed, his first thought was to scrap the film.

"Fortunately, I was surrounded by really good people who insisted that I couldn't be such a lazy bastard and that we had to go out and find a way of finishing the film for Heath," Gilliam said.

His solution was to cast Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell to play incarnations of Ledger during otherworldly portions of the fantasy film.

Ledger's character, Tony, is a slick-tongued fundraiser for children's charities who crosses Russian mobsters and is left for dead, hanging under a London bridge. He's rescued by a small theater troupe run by Parnassus (Christopher Plummer), an immortal monk who made a deal with the devil (Tom Waits) and now must find a way to keep the wily demon from taking the soul of his teenage daughter (Lily Cole).

Parnassus is overseer of a magic mirror that sends people to a world of imagination, and the script called for Tony to take three trips to the other side _ portions of the film that had not been shot when Ledger died.

Depp, who worked with Gilliam on "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" (1998) and the Quixote picture before it was aborted, stepped in with Law and Farrell to each play an incarnation of Tony on his through-the-looking-glass sequences.

"The real credit has got to go to Johnny, Colin and Jude, which was an extraordinary thing, to come in," Gilliam said. "They're all doing other films, they're involved in other projects, and they came to the rescue of this thing.

"They did it solely, basically, for nothing. The money they would have been paid went to Matilda, Heath's daughter. To me, they're the real heroes."

Ledger won the supporting-actor Academy Award in February for his last completed role as the maniacal Joker in "The Dark Knight."

"Doctor Parnassus" includes allusions that eerily parallel the mythic aura that has grown around Ledger. The movie has references to unforeseen death, remaining forever young _ even James Dean, to whom Ledger has been compared as another rising star who died before his time.

Gilliam said those parallels were in the script before Ledger died, and he decided they should stay because "this is the movie Heath wanted to see, and this is the movie that we will do. And I hope he would be pleased with it. I think he would be."

___

On the Net: http://www.festival-cannes.fr

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CANNES, France — Heath Ledger's zeal roused his co-stars to up their game in his final film, and his death inspired them _ and three A-list friends who completed his role _ to carry on with a st...
CANNES, France — Heath Ledger's zeal roused his co-stars to up their game in his final film, and his death inspired them _ and three A-list friends who completed his role _ to carry on with a st...
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09:02 PM on 05/24/2009
Film Review: The White Ribbon By Peter Brunette

Not a romantic comedy by the looks of it, darn!

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3i82a4bef3801993123717fa6d099d0cca
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1088
10:55 PM on 05/22/2009
Love this!

http://www.politico.com/
05:36 PM on 05/22/2009
jude law, johnny deep, colin ferrell and heath ledger are all actors in their own class who can be related by looks among many
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WilliamL
05:27 PM on 05/24/2009
ok
05:12 PM on 05/22/2009
this whole story is amazing, wonderful people drawn together by a love of film and the power of its message. tangential to that point is the obvious, which hasn't been stated quite enough IMO...that many current prescription drugs are walking a thin line with respect to side effects and interactions. Too many drugs are being recommended not for what they were designed to do, but because of an somewhat common side effect...point being that a larger driver (powerful original focus of the drug) is "going for the ride" and free to interact with another powerful driver...all in the hopes of some relief in its secondary application (what it is being advertised for, but doesn't do very well...or to many people). For example...a strong antihistamine is found to make people sleepy as a side effect...it gets marketed as a major sleep aid but noone points out that it is also primarily suppressing the immune response. You don't have to take too many drugs with a second major and unstated function before you're asking for trouble...before you get a few that work in tandem to suppress some function that involves being alive. ultimately Ledger's death deserves a fuller expose...he wasn't an addict or an abuser, he had a bad cold and couldn't sleep(!) Better hope you don't try the same combination he did, with the same genetic makeup..you know?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ByersL
What fresh hell is this?
04:34 PM on 05/22/2009
Such a sad end to a wonderful young actor's life. Thank you to the members of the cast and Gilliam, who did what might have seemed impossible, for Heath's legacy.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
slaxx
04:30 PM on 05/22/2009
sad.
04:06 PM on 05/22/2009
Rent the Aussie film "Candy".
04:05 PM on 05/22/2009
The great performance in here, nuanced and emotional, is Chis Plummer's.
12:16 AM on 05/23/2009
I'm sure Mr. Plummer did a fantastic job as he does in all his films.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
03:59 PM on 05/22/2009
I hope to see this one! Heath will never be forgotten.
01:59 PM on 05/22/2009
He's also so good in "I'm Not There" - he's the second-best behind Cate Blanchett, who is superb/surreal in the film! Ledger is a robust and weighty Dylan (role-wise, heh heh, not flesh)

Love Ledger!
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jaycg9
12:31 PM on 05/22/2009
I just hope it's a good movie.
12:21 PM on 05/22/2009
His energy was exhausting and was passed on to the other actors? That's called being ramped up on amphetamines and sharing your prescriptions.
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12:58 PM on 05/22/2009
I'm as much into iconoclastic comments as anyone ... but you sir, are not a mensch.
02:52 PM on 05/22/2009
Classy.
12:14 PM on 05/22/2009
RIP
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proggirl
college teacher, artist, writer
12:04 PM on 05/22/2009
I admired Hath's work, but I am much more excited at the prospect of a new Gilliam film!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sector1463
07:25 PM on 05/22/2009
Really. Loved Brazil. Loved Time Bandits. Loved Monty Python.
11:53 AM on 05/22/2009
I've heard Tom Waits does his usual great acting job in this film. A true American talent: songwriter in the same mold as Hoagy Carmichael, unique singing voice, pianist and guitarist, and a thespian.
01:53 PM on 05/22/2009
Tom Waits acts????
04:03 PM on 05/22/2009
Yeah, he acts, and writes great music and performs it too. Seen him in a concert last year. Check out his acting in "Iron Weed" opposite Jack Nickelson and Meryll Streep.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
xstevejx
04:43 PM on 05/22/2009
If acting like yourself counts as acting, I guess. :-)