Val Kilmer! You were a Part of me and Us! We will miss your mortal State, Cherishing the Immortal
My wife thought that you had luscious lips. Okay, my words, but gazing at one of your glamorous images, discussing your passing, she was impressed by your mouth. Fair enough. When you were 25 or 30, maybe. A lot of us looked better then, in those younger ages, no? You were a good looking, striking man. An actor, sometimes an icon, and a man that in his peak was one of the best and most alluring, while in his last years became a bit more like many of the rest of us. It was not all about looks, either.
You had a big screen and quirky personality. You were amazing, to me, in The Saint. Back then when I saw you portray all the covert characters, I fancied myself a man with some kind of plan about making or being in films. I thought that I might be part of the craft of pushing celluloid and stories out to the masses.
Pipe dreams, in some ways close to home for me, in some ways farther away from me than ever.
Val, you were a part of me, I realize. The cool guy, but also the dork. That is who you could be. The awkward German character with the funny teeth. Who are you? Who do you want to be? Who do you need to be? Does the beautiful woman really love you?
Can she love me?
Who is she? Who am I? What are we all about?
Kilmer explored roles, like the enigmatic Jim Morrison of the Doors. Who was that? What was that? How does he come to be? Who is that crazy, genius artist who sings his ballads and rants his rages from before my birth, and dies tragically in a drug-laden life in France?
A poet, he wanted to be. I read the ground-breaking book about him more recently. "Nobody Gets Out of Here Alive." Clues to the rest of us, indicators of other lives lived, how life can be a toss-up. Mysterious, full of riddles. Big and glorious and small and insignificant.
A paradox.
But, Val, from what I know, or knew, was not too far off from the rest of us. He made it to age 65, plagued and hounded by a throat cancer for some eleven years. He got that malady at the age I am now.
I hope to make it to that age, with no cancers.
We all must suffer some fates, known or not known.
We can see ourselves in films, in the lives of others. Stories and narratives
We saw ourselves in him, through him. Fantasy and foil, hero and regular no one.
I saw me in him, or him in me. He has the look, or the girl, or the attitude, or the perplexed questions.
Like me, or at least what I have many times wanted to be.
Complete. A complete person, a complete life. A guy with lips that attract someone he cares for.
I do not know that much about this guy, at the end of the day, but his passing awakened in me a part of myself, a part of my youth, and part of my hopes, my dreams, my fantasies.
He was not too cool to be above the cool. He could be the fool. He was a talented portrayer of us humans, of you and me and that next guy.
Thanks, Val, if I can call you that. You gave and shared a lot, with me and others, and I wrestle with it and I cherish your place in me. In all of us, you transcended quite a bit.
Take care, buddy; I will see you in future shows and perhaps the heavens, in dreams and memories and in between. I will see you in me, and in her, and in and out of all existence.
Life is what you make it, it seems, and you and I and the rest are trying to make it choice and real.
I think that you did. I knew guys that reminded me of you. In Los Angeles, maybe in South America, perhaps in the Middle East, or at a training with guys and gals in uniform in some off forsaken base here in the U.S. or elsewhere.
Maybe it was in my home state Indiana.
I think that I have known you and your type across my life. And I will miss that you are no longer here, and that I can only reminisce about how you made me laugh, and thrilled me, and sometimes that was me. I was that guy, too. You and me, we had some great times.
Take care.