December 22, 2009 9:11 AM

Resurrecting Heath Ledger's Final Film

By
David Morgan
(CBS)  Director Terry Gilliam is no stranger to difficulties on his films.

He's suffered the slings and arrows of such outrageous fortune as broken cameras (on the first day of shooting "Monty Python and the Holy Grail"), budget shortfalls (his epic "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" was taken over by the insurance company), and distributor intransigence (he fought Universal when the studio refused to release "Brazil" without a "happy" ending).

He has battled (and lost) against freak weather (storms destroyed the Spanish sets of "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote" two days into filming), and sick actors (his Don Quixote, Jean Rochefort, required surgery for a double herniated disc, leading to the film's suspension).

If Nietzsche's correct, Gilliam must be the strongest filmmaker in the world.

But even he doubted the ability to complete his latest film, "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus," when star Heath Ledger died midway through production, with several of his key scenes still to go before the cameras.

"The day Heath died, we did nothing," Gilliam recalled. "We were just out, lying on the floor of the office, nobody moved: It's not true! "

Luckily, the film's fantastical premise offered a way out - or rather, a way in - to completing the project. Clever solutions and a few tiny rewrites allowed "Imaginarium" to be finished in a seamless fashion.

If audiences didn't know the horrific backstory which led three major stars to join the cast and complete Ledger's unfilmed scenes, they wouldn't suspect that the appearances of Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell in the modestly budgeted picture weren't planned from the beginning.

And the backstory is horrific.

Devil in a Bowler

"The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus" is a tale of an Eastern mystic (Christopher Plummer) whose bargain with the Devil, Mr. Nick (played by Tom Waits), has granted him immortality but at a terrible cost - the soul of his daughter once she reaches her 16th birthday. Parnassus wagers with Mr. Nick for a chance to save his offspring, betting he can capture five souls. As those who have bet with the Devil can tell you, such wagers are not easily won.

As Parnassus travels gypsy-like with a small band of companions, his only hope to save his daughter is a stranger whose near-lifeless body is found hanging under a London bridge. Though some of Parnassus' party doubt the reliability or usefulness of Tony (Heath Ledger), the man they rescue happily joins in the task of finding five souls - as a means, perhaps, to redeem (or obscure) his own secret vice.

How those souls are captured is by inviting people through the "magic mirror" of Parnassus' Imaginarium. Once inside, they inhabit a world that is an embodiment of their greatest desires, or fears, brought to vivid life through Parnassus' trance-induced imagination.

As in many of Gilliam's films, the imagination is a source of power - heroes wield it against less creative foes. Here, it is also a test of will: If those who enter the Imaginarium "fail" their test, bye bye soul.

(Sony Pictures Classics)
Aiding Parnassus is his merry band - comprised of daughter Valentina (Lily Cole); Anton (Andrew Garfield), a barker who is less-than-successful at drawing unwitting victims; and diminutive driver Percy (Verne Troyer) - who journey into London aboard a horse-drawn wagon that unfurls into a small stage, inviting "customers."

(Left: Heath Ledger and Lily Cole.)

Gilliam, who co-wrote the screenplay with Charles McKeown (with whom he collaborated on "Brazil" and "Munchausen"), said the film was partly inspired by the reception to his last film, "Tideland," and the notion of a storyteller whose stories didn't have an audience. The film, a British-Canadian co-production, was first budgeted at $25 million, to be shot in London and on stages in Vancouver.

Sharing producer's chores with Canadian William Vince was Gilliam's daughter, Amy, who had worked in various production capacities on her father's and others' films, and had produced the independent feature "Push."

"I like the fact that I know him very well and I know how he works, and I'm not scared to tell him he can't have something - You can't have this, you can't afford it," said Amy.

Ledger, who starred in Gilliam's "The Brothers Grimm," was attending a meeting where Gilliam was showing storyboards for his film when he slipped the director a note asking, "Can I play Tony?"

"At that moment, because all of the other actors were in place, I thought, 'Oh, cool! We've got our star! We're going get our financing from Hollywood!'" said Amy Gilliam.

But Ledger's popularity and critical acceptance (he'd received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor for 2005's "Brokeback Mountain") still didn't ensure the filmmakers an easy time getting money, as Terry Gilliam recalled:

"We were out there in L.A. at the end of 2007, saying, 'Okay, Summer of 2008, 'Dark Knight,' Joker, Heath Ledger will be the big star in the planet, and we'll be coming out a couple of months later.' This very complex idea they couldn't grasp.

"Everybody, even the smaller independent operations, they want Big Names in there. And there's only a few Big Names. An A-list isn't quite the same anymore - there's the A-list, and then there's the A-Prime-List, and they're really only interested in A-Prime."

Money ended up coming from a string of distribution deals in several countries, including England, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan,


"It Was Going to Be Really Cheap and Easy!"

As Gilliam said, the filmmakers were expecting a death - just not Ledgers'. Producer Bill Vince was suffering from cancer.

The tight budget and difficult conditions of the London location filming - lots of night shoots - were exacerbated by logistical problems, including Parnassus' wagon, which was built to serve as a self-contained stage.

The tall, thin wagon which Gilliam designed, could not fit over or under some London bridges. "We spent days planning routes to get this wagon to the next location," said Amy.

(Sony Pictures Classics)
"This wagon was the bane of our lives."

(Left: Director Terry Gilliam and cinematographer Nicola Pecorini.)

Nicola Pecorini, who has photographed Gilliam's films since "Fear and Loathing," said, "Everything is expensive in London. Because of the small budget we had very limited time, locations, permits, parking." He cut down on set-up time by filming with pre-existing public street lighting. "My rigging crew spent a lot of time making sure that every public light available was working," he said.

On one location, Leadenhall Market, they set up for two days of scenes where Ledger hustles the posh crowds ("Can you put a price on your dreams?"). Percolini said they accomplished 70 set-ups a day. (You do the math.)

Actress Lily Cole said she had no problem playing a vagabond suffering from the freezing London weather. She dreamed of "a warm fire and no night shoots!"

As location shooting wrapped and the production moved to Canada for stage work, Ledger took a break in New York City.

Two days later, he was dead.


"This Doesn't Make Sense at All"

Amy Gilliam did not believe the phone call she got on January 22 informing her that the actor had been found dead in his New York City apartment. [The medical examiner later determined the cause of death was an accidental overdose of prescription drugs, including painkillers, sleeping pills and anti-anxiety medication.] He was 28, and left behind a 2-year-old daughter, Matilda.

"I got on the computer, looked at the news thinking, This doesn't make sense at all," Amy said. She then called her director into her office.

"I sat him down and . . . it was pretty horrific," she said.

"You don't ever want to have deal with a thing like this again," Terry said. "I've never experienced anything so horrible. First thing is, Heath, you don't believe he's dead. It took several days for me to really believe it because It was impossible. We had just been working a couple of days before. He was full of vim and vigor, he was flying, just in great form, And suddenly he's dead?

"But what it really is, is people like Amy and Nicola and a couple of others, said. 'We're not going to let this thing die.' What is so frightening in retrospect, we only signed off on the bank the insurance bond four days before he died. Can you imagine what the money people felt at that point? He's dead: We want our money back!

"Panic ensued."

And the calendar wasn't helping: Christopher Plummer was due to leave for his next film in three weeks.

There was also the specter of "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote," which was scrubbed after a series of calamities befell production, and the insurance company shut down filming. As it happened, a documentary crew was following the production, and out of their coverage came "Lost in La Mancha," which showed Murphy's Law in action in bitter detail.

Amy said she went into "overdrive," though she says, because everyone was grieving, it was difficult for some to understand why she was running around trying to hire an actor. But she did not want a sequel to "Lost in La Mancha."

"I'm not going to let my dad's film fall apart," she said, attributing her persistence to "Gilliam blood."

Gilliam called Johnny Depp, who had starred in "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," and the aborted "Man Who Killed Don Quixote," to commiserate, "because he was close as well to Heath. And I said, 'I don't know what the f--- I'm going to do, probably go home.' And he said, 'Whatever you do, I'll be there, whatever you want.'



Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
  • David Morgan

    David Morgan is a senior editor at CBSNews.com and cbssundaymorning.com.

Add a Comment
by cysmee320 December 22, 2009 6:05 PM EST
Any movie Heath touched was totally enjoyed by this viewer. I first began to absolutely LOVE Heath after seeing him in "10 Things I Hate About You" and "The Patriot." I followed his work in every film after that. "Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassum" will be no different. I am thoroughly looking forward to seeing Heath in him final role. From what I have read and watched so far, it looks too extraordinary to even believe. Kudos goes out to Killiam for going forward with the production even after Heath's death. Along with his actor friends and family, I too, will miss him and love his work until death do us part.

R.I.P. Heathcliff Andrew Ledger (April 4th, 1979 - January 22nd, 2008)
Reply to this comment
by bubbadubba December 21, 2009 9:53 PM EST
I have never seen any movie where the star died halfway through filming that was worth watching.
NONE.
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