"The Dark Knight" - Heath - Wow
I'm a bit behind the curve here, but I finally got to see "The Dark Knight".
I heard that Heath Ledger's performance was amazing, but was unsure if he was getting a critical boost from his untimely and unfortunate death. This happens often when someone in the public eye passes. Everything they've done all of a sudden seems better than it would have had they still been alive. The bad and middling is forgotten and the good is enhanced and illuminated.
Did this happen with Heath's portrayal of the Joker? Was this just a good actor portraying a homocidal manic? Good actors playing psychologically unbalanced characters always seem to give performances above what is expected of them. Or was this something more? Did he really get so deeply into this role that it destroyed him? If so, how gripping was the performance?
In my opinion, Heath Ledger has always been a good actor. His performances in "The Patriot" and "A Knight's Tale" were both well done. His role in "The Patriot" was short, but he did manage to display the passion of his character on the screen. "A Knight's Tale" was, in essence, a romantic comedy with action sequences and a tear-jerking backstory. Heath successfully acting through all facet's of very watchable movie.
So how did I think he did in "The Dark Knight"? I went in expecting a great performance. I had been swayed by all the hype, but it wasn't hype. His performance went beyond a great performance and reached a level of transcendence on par with Marlon Brando's portrayal of Colonel Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now". It was if the actors never realized that the camera's were there and had truly become these characters. In Heath's case, this would have tragic results.
I've always felt that a great litmus test for actors is not how well they deliver lines of dialogue, but how they act through no dialogue or limited dialogue. There are three instances in the film that have Heath passing this test without difficulty.
The first is when the Joker attacks the police convoy carrying Harvey Dent and Batman shows up in the Batmobile. Batman uses the Batmobile to take out the garbage truck. The Joker watches this unfold and vocalizes a very casual, "huh". You have to hear it in context to understand why I think this was a brilliant piece of acting.
The secondly is in the hospital, when the Joker sits down next to Harvey's bed. He says one word: "Hi." The delivery of this one word holds so much in it. Heath is able to portray remorse, compassion, uncertainty, confidence and a level of inevitability in the sitaution all from one word. I was blown away by that one word.
The third occurrence, Heath does not say anything. He is walking out of the hospital in a nurse's outfit, wearing heels. It's all very comical and then the hospital starts to blow up behind him as he casually strolls away from it. But he stops and looks back when he realizes that not all of the explosives have gone off. He pulls out his remote and repeatedly hits the trigger - to no avail - and then pounds the remote until the rest of the explosives go off. You have to realize he must be doing this in front of a green screen.
Yes there are many more examples of his skills in this movie, but these three moments really stood out for me.
There is another scene that really stood out as well. It was said that Heath watched a lot of movies and read a lot of books on homocidal maniacs for his inspiration in playing the Joker. I think I know one movie that he drew directly from.
There is a scene where one cop is left in the interrogation room with the Joker. The Joker starts to bait the cop by asking how many of the cop's friends he had killed. He then starts to explain why he uses a knife to kill his victims.
If you had seen "Exorcist III", the delivery in this scene would be familiar to you. Brad Dourif, as the Gemini, delivers a lengthy monologue on why he kills his victims the way he does. The similarity in delivery leads me to believe that Heath was very familiar with Brad's portrayal and drew from it for that scene. Watch "Exorcist III" - it's not nearly as bad as "Exorcist II", I promise - and decide for yourself.
WHEN he posthumously receives the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, there will be those that will grumble that it's a sentimental vote. I will not be one of those. Thank you Heath and God bless.

