Skip navigation

No joke: Ledger’s Batman villain has Oscar shot


< Prev | 1 | 2
  Movie video
  Inside ‘The Morgans’
Dec. 2: Go behind the scenes with Hugh Grant, Sarah Jessica Parker, director Marc Lawrence and the rest of the cast of the new romantic comedy, "Did You Hear About the Morgans?"

Slideshow
Image: Avatar
  December movies
James Cameron’s spectacle “Avatar” hits theaters, along with George Clooney, who is “Up in the Air,” and Robert Downey Jr. as “Sherlock Holmes.”

more photos

Along with Finch, past posthumous Oscar contenders include James Dean, who was nominated for best actor twice after his death, with 1955’s “East of Eden” and 1956’s “Giant.”

The other actors nominated after their deaths were Spencer Tracy (1967’s “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner”); Ralph Richardson (1984’s “Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes”); Massimo Troisi (1995’s “The Postman”); and Jeanne Eagels (1929’s “The Letter”).

The aura surrounding Ledger since his death is a sign that, like Dean, he could endure as a mythic figure of talent silenced before his time. Ledger had a best-actor nomination for 2005’s “Brokeback Mountain” and was considered a gifted performer just coming into his own.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

That will not necessarily improve his Oscar chances. Dean had two shots after his death and lost both.

“The fact that only one actor has ever won an Oscar from the grave tells us that in general at the Oscars, the feeling is when you’re dead, you’re dead,” said Tom O’Neil, a columnist for TheEnvelope.com, an awards Web site. “Maybe the point is that the Oscars are all about hugs. Nobody wants to hug a dead guy.”

Oscar voters tend to hand out the trophies for heroic or sympathetic roles, so Ledger’s supremely evil characterization could prove a drawback along with the action-genre stigma.

Yet there are notable instances when actors playing villains made such an impression that academy members could not resist voting for them.

Besides Hopkins as cannibalistic killer Lecter, bad guys who won include Fredric March in the title role of 1932’s “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”; F. Murray Abraham as Mozart’s mortal enemy in 1984’s “Amadeus”; Kathy Bates as a novelist’s demented fan in 1990’s “Misery”; Denzel Washington as a corrupt cop in 2001’s “Training Day”; and Charlize Theron as a serial killer in 2003’s “Monster.”

The last two years have brought Oscar wins by Forest Whitaker as brutal dictator Idi Amin in “The Last King of Scotland,” Tilda Swinton as a murderously ruthless attorney in “Michael Clayton,” Daniel Day-Lewis as a savage oilman in “There Will Be Blood” and Javier Bardem as a psychopathic killer in “No Country for Old Men.”

“When a performance as a villain is that memorable, it can be held up as being that much more special,” said Chuck Walton, managing editor of online movie-ticket site Fandango.com. “Oscar voters have a lot of respect for actors willing to really let themselves go and inhabit darker roles.”

Warner Bros. and the filmmakers are profuse in their praise of Ledger but have been diplomatic about the Oscar talk. Awards publicity generally pads a movie’s box-office and DVD receipts, and the studio has cautiously avoided any appearance of profiting from the added attention Ledger’s death has brought to the film.

“The Dark Knight” director Christopher Nolan sidestepped the Oscar question, saying that he was simply happy that early viewers were responding to the performance the way Ledger would have liked.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


< Prev | 1 | 2

Sponsored links

Resource guide