The Dark Knight Heath Ledger Dead - ALL talk/rememberance and discussion in here

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These idiots who were standing outsite the SAG awards with banners saying "Heath will burn in hell" really piss me off. If I was outside and seen that I would have ran over with my baseball bat and beat the living **** out of them. I don't care if there were any women there they would have got it too if they were bloody daft enough to go along with that bull****.
 
http://www.newsweek.com/id/105580
Charisma as Natural as Gravity

By Christopher Nolan | NEWSWEEK
Feb 4, 2008 Issue | Updated: 3:21 p.m. ET Jan 26, 2008

Heath Ledger, 28, Actor
Best known for his haunting, Oscar-nominated performance as Ennis Del Mar, one of the gay cowboys in 2005 ' s "Brokeback Mountain," Ledger was a massive young talent on the cusp of greatness when he died last week in New York. The native Australian, who is survived by his 2-year-old daughter, Matilda, had recently finished work on this summer's "Batman" sequel, "The Dark Knight," in which he plays a villain, the Joker. Christopher Nolan, the film's director, shared these memories:

One night, as I'm standing on LaSalle Street in Chicago, trying to line up a shot for "The Dark Knight," a production assistant skateboards into my line of sight. Silently, I curse the moment that Heath first skated onto our set in full character makeup. I'd fretted about the reaction of Batman fans to a skateboarding Joker, but the actual result was a proliferation of skateboards among the younger crew members. If you'd asked those kids why they had chosen to bring their boards to work, they would have answered honestly that they didn't know. That's real charisma—as invisible and natural as gravity. That's what Heath had.

Heath was bursting with creativity. It was in his every gesture. He once told me that he liked to wait between jobs until he was creatively hungry. Until he needed it again. He brought that attitude to our set every day. There aren't many actors who can make you feel ashamed of how often you complain about doing the best job in the world. Heath was one of them.

One time he and another actor were shooting a complex scene. We had two days to shoot it, and at the end of the first day, they'd really found something and Heath was worried that he might not have it if we stopped. He wanted to carry on and finish. It's tough to ask the crew to work late when we all know there's plenty of time to finish the next day. But everyone seemed to understand that Heath had something special and that we had to capture it before it disappeared. Months later, I learned that as Heath left the set that night, he quietly thanked each crew member for working late. Quietly. Not trying to make a point, just grateful for the chance to create that they'd given him.

Those nights on the streets of Chicago were filled with stunts. These can be boring times for an actor, but Heath was fascinated, eagerly accepting our invitation to ride in the camera car as we chased vehicles through movie traffic—not just for the thrill ride, but to be a part of it. Of everything. He'd brought his laptop along in the car, and we had a high-speed screening of two of his works-in-progress: short films he'd made that were exciting and haunting. Their exuberance made me feel jaded and leaden. I've never felt as old as I did watching Heath explore his talents. That night I made him an offer—knowing he wouldn't take me up on it—that he should feel free to come by the set when he had a night off so he could see what we were up to.

When you get into the edit suite after shooting a movie, you feel a responsibility to an actor who has trusted you, and Heath gave us everything. As we started my cut, I would wonder about each take we chose, each trim we made. I would visualize the screening where we'd have to show him the finished film—sitting three or four rows behind him, watching the movements of his head for clues to what he was thinking about what we'd done with all that he'd given us. Now that screening will never be real. I see him every day in my edit suite. I study his face, his voice. And I miss him terribly.

Back on LaSalle Street, I turn to my assistant director and I tell him to clear the skateboarding kid out of my line of sight when I realize—it's Heath, woolly hat pulled low over his eyes, here on his night off to take me up on my offer. I can't help but smile.

© 2008 Newsweek, Inc.





:word: Well said, Chris.
 
Also, this article proves that the Joker will NOT be riding a skateboard.

Nolan even worried about the fans reaction to Heath doing this ... kind of funny.
 
Also, this article proves that the Joker will NOT be riding a skateboard.

Nolan even worried about the fans reaction to Heath doing this ... kind of funny.

Which makes me confident that there's more to the Joker than him simply wearing makeup. If Nolan is worried about the Joker riding a skateboard I find it hard to believe he would toss the permawhite issue out the window. Especially considering how the microwave emitter plot point was incorporated into BB.
 
Fa sho.

Despite being 20 years older than Heath, I could oddly enough see DDL picking up where Heath left off if The Joker were to appear in the third film. Too soon to speculate, and I really don't care right now... but I'd be lying if I said I'm not at least entertaining the idea.

Hmmm......

i mentioned this a few days back, he really has the same sort of look about him. under the makeup he would look very similar.
 
I'll always remember how Heath Ledger praised Jack Nicholson even when Nicholson seemed a little...confused about him. As I said at the time, Ledger showed himself to be a class act and a true gentlemen.
 
That was a beautiful tribute from Daniel Day Lewis, and it's esp. significant since DDL is one of the best actors in Hollywood, so to have him praise Heath means alot. Gosling's black ribbon was also a nice tribute (but his shirt is fugly).

Oh, and those stupid protesters can go to hell...
 
that was beautiful... nolan has a way with words, and heath sounds even more a nice guy then i thought, the way he thanked everybody after filming..
 
These idiots who were standing outsite the SAG awards with banners saying "Heath will burn in hell" really piss me off. If I was outside and seen that I would have ran over with my baseball bat and beat the living **** out of them. I don't care if there were any women there they would have got it too if they were bloody daft enough to go along with that bull****.

They asked James Gandolfini(Tony Soprano) he didn't look to happy about it. Would have loved him to go Tony on one of them.
 
this thread absolutely should not be closed. it's a beautiful tribute to the man, and people shouldn't have to wade through overwhelmingly long and jumbled threads to find it.
 
Which makes me confident that there's more to the Joker than him simply wearing makeup. If Nolan is worried about the Joker riding a skateboard I find it hard to believe he would toss the permawhite issue out the window.
Alert! Alert! The Great Permawhite Theory returns! Women and children first, this way! -->
 
Now I know why Nolan had kept quiet after Ledger's untimely death; he wanted to write an article that remembers him, not just a few sentence's worth. I'm glad to see Nolan's thoughts on Heath, and it is very heartfelt and moving. I'd like to hear what Christian Bale has to say as well.
 
Which makes me confident that there's more to the Joker than him simply wearing makeup. If Nolan is worried about the Joker riding a skateboard I find it hard to believe he would toss the permawhite issue out the window. Especially considering how the microwave emitter plot point was incorporated into BB.
Was the microwave emitter plot used in a comic before?
 
Nolan must be hurting so much right now, having to re-open these fresh wounds every morning until the movie hype is over.

I just hope he realises he's not alone in his grief. We're all one big family right now, and I hope he knows that we as fans are all here to support not only Ledger's family and the ones he left behind, but also the entire crew that worked with him on the set of The Dark Knight.

I'd give Nolan a hug if I could.
 
Was the microwave emitter plot used in a comic before?

I don't read comics. The point I was making is that the microwave emitter stretched the boundaries of realism. A permawhite Joker is not too far removed from a world where someone with a skin condition like Michael Jackson exists. I'm confident that under the makeup he'll be an albino which was caused by some kind of chemical accident.
 
Well to look at the bright side of this very dark tragedy, we discovered Daniel Day Lewis is like the best person alive.
 
I'm struggling to find the right words to say how proud I am of Nolan writing such meaningful words about an actor we all feel such a loss for. I can't see how he could have put it any better.
 
and that some people in hollywood still have feelings and are able to show some respect to the ones who deserve it.daniel is the kind of person who might cry after watching TDK.good man and great actor.
 
How rather touching. Joker riding a skateboard is an interesting visual.
 
This is why Nolan is the man . . . I was wondering why he kept quiet for so many days, but it's obvious that he was putting together a rightful tribute :up:
 
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