Michael Cimino, Writer-Director of 'The Deer Hunter' and 'Heaven's Gate,' Dies at 77
He was not on the list.
He won two Oscars for the Vietnam classic, but his wildly
overbudget film about the settlement of the American West brought down a
studio.
Michael Cimino, who won Oscars for director and best picture
for the powerful 1978 Vietnam War drama The Deer Hunter, died Saturday. He was
77.
Thierry Fremaux, director of the Cannes Film Festival,
announced the news on Twitter. Los Angeles County acting coroner's Lt. B. Kim
confirmed his death to the Associated Press. His nephew T. Rafael Cimino told
the The Hollywood Reporter that his uncle passed away quietly at his home in
Beverly Hills of natural causes.
Deer Hunter actor Robert De Niro sent THR a statement
mourning the director: "Our work together is something I will always
remember. He will be missed."
Despite his achievement with Deer Hunter, his next project,
Heaven's Gate (1980), capsized United Artists with his profligate budget
excesses. Subsequently, the words "Heaven's Gate" entered filmmaking
lexicon as an out-of-control, overbudget production.
A strong believer in location shooting, Cimino insisted that
real places had a tremendous effect on actors' performances and the film's
texture. It worked fine for his directorial debut in Thunderbolt and Lightfoot
(1974), shot in Big Sky territory under the cost-conscious eye of producer/star
Clint Eastwood. It also featured an inspired performance from co-star Jeff
Bridges.
Yet Heaven's Gate, a frontier epic about the settlement of
the West that was shot mainly at a studio-constructed town in Glacier National
Park in Montana, outraged executives at UA. Cimino's insistence on
authenticity, in the end, deflated the production and sank the troubled studio.
In addition, its running time of 219 minutes exasperated theater owners.
Trying to cut its losses, UA pulled it from exhibition. The
studio reissued a trimmed version in 1981, but that fared no better. The
entire debacle was chronicled in Final Cut: Art, Money, and Ego in the Making
of Heaven's Gate, the Film That Sank United Artists, a 1999 book written by
former UA executive Steven Bach. (The film did play at Cannes.)
In a March 2015 interview with THR's Seth Abramovitch —
perhaps the last one he ever did — Cimino described the audience reaction to
Deer Hunter when the film, which also starred Christopher Walken and John
Cazale and collected five Oscars in all, opened in theaters.
"We were sitting in the back row of the — I've
forgotten the name of the theater in Westwood — and people were just driving up
in cars, just a line of cars," he recalled. "And someone would run
out and buy 12 tickets. Someone would run out and buy 20 tickets. And this kept
going and going and going and going.
"And then we had a screening and [his assistant] came
running up to me and said, 'Michael, you've got to come quick, come quick to
the lobby.' I said, 'What's wrong?' And she said, 'Come with me.' And the
ladies room was filled with women who were weeping and wailing and just broke
down crying. There were ex-vets who literally crawled up the aisle out of their
seat. It was just an astounding, astounding reaction."
Even the powerful eloquence of Deer Hunter, which Cimino
also wrote for another Oscar nomination, was mired in controversy. Critics and
historians complained that it misrepresented history. In particular, they
pointed to a scene in which a sadistic North Vietnamese officer forces the
captive U.S. soldiers to play Russian roulette. It was a contention that Cimino
disputed strongly, insisting his story transcended literal history.
After Heaven's Gate, Cimino's directing was sporadic, with
his work including Year of the Dragon (1985), The Sicilian (1987), Desperate
Hours (1990), The Sunchaser (1996) and a segment in To Each His Own Cinema
(2007).
Indicative of Cimino's precarious standing in Hollywood
after Heaven's Gate, MGM/UA bowed to protesters who contended that Year of the
Dragon was racist in its depiction of Chinese Americans. That prompted the
studio to issue a disclaimer at the film's beginning. The controversy showed
that a Cimino project was vulnerable to stringent scrutiny and hyper-reaction.
From left: Jon Voight, Jane Fonda and Cimino at the 1979
Oscars, when Fonda's 'Coming Home' lost best picture to 'The Deer Hunter.'
Years later, his director's cut for Heaven's Gate, which
starred Kris Kristofferson and Walken, finally made it to the screen. He told
Abramovitch he was happy with his work.
"Yeah. And it just had, just overwhelming responses. It
was at Venice and it was just a half-hour standing ovation, and New York Film
Festival, same thing," he said. "And just packed, I mean the minute
they announced it, it was sold out in 10 minutes. And then of course at the
Lumiere Festival in France, the biggest film theater I know of in the world,
6,000 people, was filled from top to bottom. It was overwhelming. I got on the
stage, I couldn't speak. It was just, I mean, 6,000 people giving you a
standing ovation is quite an experience."
Cimino was born Feb. 3, 1939, and grew up in New York City.
While attending Yale University as a fine arts major, he enlisted in the U.S.
Army Reserve. Cimino got his masters from the University of New Haven in 1963,
then moved to New York to study acting and ballet. He also worked for a small
company that produced documentary and industrial films.
By the late 1960s, Cimino had established a reputation as a
skilled maker of TV commercials. But in 1971, he gave that up to go to Los
Angeles to pursue moviemaking. He began script writing and received credit on
Silent Running (1972), which he co-wrote with Deric Washburn and Steven Bochco.
He next worked with John Milius on the screenplay for the
Dirty Harry follow-up Magnum Force (1973), starring Eastwood.
Cimino wrote and directed Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, an
offbeat story about a Big Sky mining heist that won accolades. Based on that,
Cimino received several studio offers, but he only wanted to do projects he was
passionate about. Such was the case with a story he championed — about three
steelworker friends who go off to fight in the Vietnam War.
He convinced EMI to finance it, and shooting began on The
Deer Hunter in 1977.
Cimino is survived by his cousins, Leslie, Ashley, Melissa,
Adele and James Capozzoli; his grandniece, Stephanie Nichole Cimino; and his
nephew, T. Rafael Cimino.
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