• Reviews
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Interviews
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Other Publications
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Shorts & Vignettes
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Creative Corner
    • RANDOM
    • RECENT
  • Archives

cinephile, noun ~ cine·phile \ˈsi-nə-ˌfī(-ə)l\ a devotee of motion pictures

Where I write.
alex.arabian89@gmail.com
Login

Login
Making a CinephileMaking a Cinephile
Making a CinephileMaking a Cinephile

Cinephile, n


| cine·phile | \ˈsi-nə-ˌfī(-ə)l\ |


a devotee of motion pictures

Menu   ≡ ╳
  • Reviews
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • THE MUSIC OF SILENCE: A Squandered OpportunityTHE MUSIC OF SILENCE: A Squandered OpportunityMarch 2, 2018
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • How Color Is The Key To Unlocking Netflix’s Subversive Cult Body-Horror Hit ‘The Perfection’

          How Color Is The Key To Unlocking Netflix’s Subversive Cult Body-Horror Hit ‘The Perfection’

          January 24, 2022
        • ‘The Velvet Underground’ review: Music doc from Todd Haynes brilliantly reintroduces important counterculture voices to a new generation [Grade: A] (Mill Valley Film Festival)

          ‘The Velvet Underground’ review: Music doc from Todd Haynes brilliantly reintroduces important counterculture voices to a new generation [Grade: A] (Mill Valley Film Festival)

          January 24, 2022
        • Why The Shimmer in ‘Annihilation’ is an allegory for the U.S.’s foreign policy [Retrospective]

          Why The Shimmer in ‘Annihilation’ is an allegory for the U.S.’s foreign policy [Retrospective]

          January 24, 2022
        • Martin Scorsese’s timeless ‘Boxcar Bertha’ and the Marxist undertones of his often overlooked early classic [Retrospective]

          Martin Scorsese’s timeless ‘Boxcar Bertha’ and the Marxist undertones of his often overlooked early classic [Retrospective]

          January 24, 2022
        • Free Guy’s Marxist Parallels To John Carpenter’s They Live

          Free Guy’s Marxist Parallels To John Carpenter’s They Live

          January 24, 2022
        Read More
  • Interviews
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • Interview With Stephanie Beatriz, Star Of HALF MAGICInterview With Stephanie Beatriz, Star Of HALF MAGICFebruary 24, 2018
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • ‘Entertainment right now can be sinister’: Jane Schoenbrun on ‘We’re All Going to the World’s Fair’

          ‘Entertainment right now can be sinister’: Jane Schoenbrun on ‘We’re All Going to the World’s Fair’

          May 30, 2022
        • Interstellar improv: Don Lake spills on the stars behind Netflix’s ‘Space Force’

          Interstellar improv: Don Lake spills on the stars behind Netflix’s ‘Space Force’

          May 30, 2022
        • Interview: Pamela Adlon on Bringing Out the Dead for the Final Season of Better Things

          Interview: Pamela Adlon on Bringing Out the Dead for the Final Season of Better Things

          May 30, 2022
        • Interview: Kristen Stewart on Channeling Princess Diana for Pablo Larraín’s Spencer

          Interview: Kristen Stewart on Channeling Princess Diana for Pablo Larraín’s Spencer

          May 30, 2022
        • Interview: Jane Campion on The Power of the Dog and the Myth of the American West

          Interview: Jane Campion on The Power of the Dog and the Myth of the American West

          May 30, 2022
        Read More
  • Other Publications
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • The Facade of Freedom of Speech: U.S. Politics, Film, & Government Institutions Behind Closed DoorsThe Facade of Freedom of Speech: U.S. Politics, Film, & Government Institutions Behind Closed DoorsJanuary 7, 2020
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • Read an excerpt from an SF Indiefest award-winning local screenplay

          Read an excerpt from an SF Indiefest award-winning local screenplay

          May 30, 2022
        • 12 Best Original Netflix Movies, Ranked

          12 Best Original Netflix Movies, Ranked

          January 24, 2022
        • Jurassic World: Why There Can Never Be Another Park

          Jurassic World: Why There Can Never Be Another Park

          January 24, 2022
        • 13 Scariest Scenes from The Haunting Series That Terrified Us on Netflix

          13 Scariest Scenes from The Haunting Series That Terrified Us on Netflix

          January 24, 2022
        • 10 Scariest Horror Movies of All Time, Ranked

          10 Scariest Horror Movies of All Time, Ranked

          January 24, 2022
        Read More
  • Shorts & Vignettes
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • Graveyard ShiftGraveyard ShiftDecember 18, 2016
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • Watch The Trailer For My New Short Film, “Dave’s Last Night on Earth”

          Watch The Trailer For My New Short Film, “Dave’s Last Night on Earth”

          November 19, 2018
        • The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel

          The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel

          June 8, 2017
        • “DISCREET” Berlinale Interview

          “DISCREET” Berlinale Interview

          June 8, 2017
        • Roasted Chicken Recipe (Trading Post, Cloverdale, CA)

          Roasted Chicken Recipe (Trading Post, Cloverdale, CA)

          June 8, 2017
        • LA LA LAND takes field-leading 8 ACCA wins, including Best Picture and Best Director for Damien Chazelle

          LA LA LAND takes field-leading 8 ACCA wins, including Best Picture and Best Director for Damien Chazelle

          February 9, 2017
        Read More
  • Creative Corner
    • RANDOM
        RANDOM
        • Zach Braff Talks the Impetus and Evolution of ”A Good Person,” Table Reads With Morgan Freeman, and ”Shrinking”March 20, 2023
    • RECENT
        RECENT
        • Emily Mkrtichian on New Artsakh Documentary, “There Was, There Was Not

          Emily Mkrtichian on New Artsakh Documentary, “There Was, There Was Not

          December 17, 2024
        • David Dastmalchian Discusses Career, “Late Night with the Devil,” Dream Collaborations, and More

          David Dastmalchian Discusses Career, “Late Night with the Devil,” Dream Collaborations, and More

          August 22, 2024
        • June Squibb and Josh Margolin Dish on “Thelma”

          June Squibb and Josh Margolin Dish on “Thelma”

          June 29, 2024
        • Boots Riley Talks ”I’m a Virgo,” ”Sorry to Bother You,” Oakland, Gaza, & Leftist Politics

          Boots Riley Talks ”I’m a Virgo,” ”Sorry to Bother You,” Oakland, Gaza, & Leftist Politics

          November 9, 2023
        • Marc Turtletaub Talks ”Jules,” Sir Ben Kingsley, Producing, Directing, & More

          Marc Turtletaub Talks ”Jules,” Sir Ben Kingsley, Producing, Directing, & More

          September 1, 2023
        Read More
  • Archives

Cinema Twain

"The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man who lives fully is prepared to die at any time." - Mark Twain

“Cinema Twain” Kilmer’s Career Triumph
Photo courtesy of yours truly.

“Cinema Twain” Kilmer’s Career Triumph

December 24, 2016 Posted by Alex Arabian Film Reviews 5 Comments

Inside the intimate setting of the historical Clay Theater in San Francisco, Val Kilmer casually emerged from the dark void of the audience, seemingly appearing out of nowhere to take the stage and present his indelible masterpiece, “Cinema Twain”, the adaption of his stage play, “Citizen Twain.” He addressed the packed crowd humbly, as if he was the student and the faces that occupied the theater seats his teachers, welcoming feedback after the screening. However, after 90 minutes, the audience would soon come to realize that he was in fact the maestro, and they, along everyone who has had the pleasure of viewing this show, mere instruments of his creative dominion.

As I was waiting in line before “Cinema Twain”, I had no idea what to expect. Where has Val Kilmer been the last 13 years, aside from the occasional small role? Why did he choose to write a play about Twain? What connection did he have with him? All I could do was keep an open mind and enjoy. The last point Mr. Kilmer made before the screening was that these stage productions were not only meant to smooth the surface of his script and production, but also to develop his character. Each night, he would evolve. This also allowed Kilmer to have more creative control by interacting with the audience in a productive way that would move his scripted plot forward.

The play begins in the present day (this particular performance was taped in Pasadena in 2013). Immediately, Kilmer’s Twain establishes a recurring motif. He proclaims, “I recognize that I am dead, but I do not realize “, therein acknowledging where he is, when he is, and that he is in fact dead. Though he is aware he is dead, he does not want to accept it.

Throughout the play, Kilmer repeatedly breaks the fourth wall and engages the audience in character, taking notes rigorously on his hand with his imaginary pencil about which of his jokes are still relevant 100 years posthumously, and those that are either no longer relevant or clearly go over the audience’s head. Kilmer cleverly incorporates the “trial and error” point he made before the screening into the actual production, responding to the audience’s reactions, or, occasionally, lack-thereof; he endearingly pesters the audience to add social commentary about how shallow the world has become, whether it was telling them to explain to their children and grandchildren that newspapers are just thin iPads, or that they could not be bothered with anything that was not Kardashian-related. He is highlighting the drastic shift over the last 100 years since his death of the diminishing value of words and the increasing obsession with celebrity culture.

Cues would come in the form of a light from “god”, sending down newspapers, giving Kilmer’s Twain direction on where to take the play’s plot.

“God wants me to apologize to Mary Baker Eddy [founder of Christian Science] for accusing her of plagiarism! I will not!” Kilmer shouts. Throughout the play, he goes back and forth between telling his life story and going back to Eddy, eventually apologizing to her. Kilmer explained that although Twain publicly criticized Eddy, he greatly admired her, and spent the last 10 years of his life obsessed with her; he struggled with his own mortality, secretly believing Eddy might hold the only cure for his neurotic, existential crisis.

“God also wants me to finish my autobiography. But I do not want to, because then I will be gone. I recognize that I am dead dead, but I do not realize it.” This aforementioned motif personifies Twain’s existential crisis. The rest of the play, he meanders throughout various pivotal points in his life, using them as a vehicle to make sharp social and political commentary in a fashion that only Twain could.

One may often forget that it is just Kilmer in extensive makeup and prosthesis, but rather actually believe that Mr. Twain is performing standup comedy in the flesh. Topics ranged from god, whom he portrayed as a flawed human being, to mocking god, the inherent moral atrocity of colonialism, missionaries, and the spread of Christianity, the absurdity of the Christian justification of slavery, fundamentally deconstructing racism, the hypocrisy and daftness of politicians, and the blurred line between government and religion. Throughout the play, Kilmer’s Twain cleverly uses the terms “god” and “government” interchangeably to underline the illogical overlapping of church and state. Kilmer covers these subjects deftly, with the wry wit (which he eerily, flawlessly conjures) and sharp satire that singularly characterized Twain.

Aside from Val Kilmer’s admiration for Mark Twain as a person and important literary voice, Kilmer’s connection with Twain seemed existential. “I recognize that I am dead, but I do not realize it”. This recurring spoken motif, the reluctance of Twain to follow “god”‘s demand to finish his autobiography, and his fixation with Eddy’s Christian Science healing stories reflect a clear refusal to come to terms with death. Samuel Clemens is dead, but Mark Twain is immortal. Although his words are finite on paper, they are everlasting in our collective memory. It became apparent that this tireless portrayal reflects humankinds’s own coming to terms with death; it puts every human being’s inevitable encounter with death into a perspective that is easy to grasp.

As a whole, one can think of the production as a non-linear, surreal standup comedy show, sprinkled with moments of raw emotion. Kilmer surrounded himself with heavyweight comedians Dave Chappelle and Will Forte to help him with his standup routine and delivery. It paid dividends, as Kilmer’s Twain had the audience laughing tears. But then, on a dime, he would break out in pouring tears when discussing a sad memory, and the tone would change in such powerful way, transforming the audience’s tears into those of genuine empathy.

Kilmer displays such a wide range of emotions in the 90 minute taping of his performance, 95% of which contained the Pasadena performance in 2013, with exception of two added jokes, that it is virtually impossible to fathom his mental process of conjuring and controlling his conveyed feelings. He is no stranger to disappearing into rolls (a skill he no doubt developed during his studies at Juilliard and perfected throughout the evolution of his career), from performing his own guitar and singing as Jim Morrison in “The Doors” to portraying a junkie musician in “The Salton Sea”, he continues to choose roles that allow him to further display his exponential range as an actor. Still, there is no margin for error in a play. There are no second takes, making it all the more impressive. Simply put, it is one of the most astonishing performances I have ever seen. It would be enough applause to give Kilmer credit for his performance alone, but he also produced, wrote, and directed “Citizen Twain”.

So, where has Val Kilmer been for the last 13 years? He’s been developing this screenplay, then, opposing the typical Hollywood process, adapting it into a satirical, meta stage production. He’s been perfecting his cappolavoro, his masterpiece. Looking forward, Kilmer is excited to finally turn “Cinema Twain” into a feature-length film, for which he has already begun fundraising.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Tags: blogcinemacitizen twainclay theaterFilmfilm blogFilm reviewfilmmakinghuckhuckleberry finnjimmark twainsamuel clemensSan Franciscoval kilmerwriter
5 Comments
Share
3

About Alex Arabian

My name is Alex Arabian, and I am a freelance writer, film critic, and filmmaker. I possess an obsessive, endless, encyclopedic knowledge of film.

You also might be interested in

The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel
The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel

The Berlinale 2017 Highlight Reel

Jun 8, 2017

This is a short film I made from covering my[...]

ONCE UPON A TIME IN VENICE: Tonally Contrasted & Tiredly Contrived

ONCE UPON A TIME IN VENICE: Tonally Contrasted & Tiredly Contrived

Aug 23, 2017

[Published at Film Inquiry] Longevity isn’t easy for a traditional[...]

SFIFF 2017: ‘Landline’ – Disfunction and Difficult Transitions in the ’90s

SFIFF 2017: ‘Landline’ – Disfunction and Difficult Transitions in the ’90s

Apr 8, 2017

[Published at PopMatters] Landline is writer and director Gillian Robespierre’s[...]

5 Comments

Leave your reply.
  • Mitch Teemley
    · Reply

    December 26, 2016 at 8:21 PM

    First I’ve heard about this. Would love to see it!

  • abaRio
    · Reply

    December 27, 2016 at 1:18 AM

    I do also think it’s one of a Val’s best work and most passionate work. He’s AMAZING. Thanks for the great review. All the best.

  • Margaret
    · Reply

    December 29, 2016 at 12:59 AM

    We had the awesome pleasure of seeing this film & Mr. Kilmer in November in Westwood…. He will be in San Jose Thursday & Friday, this week, at The Stage. We are blessed to be invited to attend this showing as well! Not to be missed. Every single word of this review is accurate!

  • Steven Meyer
    · Reply

    December 30, 2016 at 7:42 PM

    Thank you for the great review Alex!
    Please contact me at cinematwain@gmail.com.

  • Psychologistmimi
    · Reply

    January 1, 2017 at 12:56 AM

    Interesting. Had no idea where he’s been all this time

Leave a Reply to abaRio

Your email is safe with us.
Cancel Reply

Search Site

Subscribe and stay tuned for more early reviews and interviews to come!

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 867 other subscribers

Recent Posts

  • Emily Mkrtichian on New Artsakh Documentary, “There Was, There Was Not
  • David Dastmalchian Discusses Career, “Late Night with the Devil,” Dream Collaborations, and More
  • June Squibb and Josh Margolin Dish on “Thelma”
  • Boots Riley Talks ”I’m a Virgo,” ”Sorry to Bother You,” Oakland, Gaza, & Leftist Politics
  • Marc Turtletaub Talks ”Jules,” Sir Ben Kingsley, Producing, Directing, & More

Categories

  • Film News
  • Film Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Original Films
  • Professional Publications
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • December 2024
  • August 2024
  • June 2024
  • November 2023
  • September 2023
  • July 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • May 2022
  • January 2022
  • August 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • March 2020
  • January 2020
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • May 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • February 2016

Contact Us

We're currently offline. Send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message
Follow me on Twitter to see the film world through my eyes. Tweet Me

Original Short

Memorial Day Tribute

Original Short

Touristy Views of SF

Original Short

Trading Post Restaurant

Original Short

Berlinale 2017

© 2025 · Making a Cinephile. Theme by HB-Themes.

Prev Next
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d