That still doesn't explain how people in the movie business can be saying he is going to get nominated and win an award in February when the film doesn't open for another few months and nobody has seen it.
An opportunity arose when he died and the studios saw that opportunity to play on it. You must see Heath in his last role...except it wasn't as he was midway through filming something else, but we'll ignore that.
A similar thing happened on a much smaller scale with Brandon Lee in The Crow. it's tragic blah blah blah, you have to see thsi film it's amazing and the last thing he ever did blah blah blah. Brandon Lee as an actor was an nobody. Yes he could have gone on to do great things, but then so could many other actors that die young or don't get their lucky break.
That film got hyped up big time because of his death. Had he lived it wouldn't have had the same impact as it did IMO because it didn't have that link with tragedy.
When you look at Brandon's career pre-that film it was nothing. When you look at Heath's he had some good stuff but most of it was average or poor.
The Dark Knight (2008) .... Joker
I'm Not There. (2007) .... Robbie
Candy (2006) .... Dan
Casanova (2005) .... Casanova
Brokeback Mountain (2005) .... Ennis Del Mar
The Brothers Grimm (2005) .... Jacob Grimm
LorRAB of Dogtown (2005) .... Skip
The Order (2003) .... Alex Bernier
Ned Kelly (2003) .... Ned Kelly
The Four Feathers (2002) .... Harry Feversham
Monster's Ball (2001) .... Sonny Grotowski
A Knight's Tale (2001) .... William Thatcher
The Patriot (2000) .... Gabriel Martin
Two HanRAB (1999) .... Jimmy
10 Things I Hate About You (1999) .... Patrick Verona
Paws (1997) .... Oberon
With the exception of Brokeback that back catalogue has nothing to warrant the kind of hype his early death created. Pretty much all of them were flops or unheard of films.
Had he not been in TDK coming later that year would there have been such a big deal about his final perfomance in The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009) saying he hould be nominated etc when nobody had seen the film as it hadn't been released yet?
An opportunity arose when he died and the studios saw that opportunity to play on it. You must see Heath in his last role...except it wasn't as he was midway through filming something else, but we'll ignore that.
A similar thing happened on a much smaller scale with Brandon Lee in The Crow. it's tragic blah blah blah, you have to see thsi film it's amazing and the last thing he ever did blah blah blah. Brandon Lee as an actor was an nobody. Yes he could have gone on to do great things, but then so could many other actors that die young or don't get their lucky break.
That film got hyped up big time because of his death. Had he lived it wouldn't have had the same impact as it did IMO because it didn't have that link with tragedy.
When you look at Brandon's career pre-that film it was nothing. When you look at Heath's he had some good stuff but most of it was average or poor.
The Dark Knight (2008) .... Joker
I'm Not There. (2007) .... Robbie
Candy (2006) .... Dan
Casanova (2005) .... Casanova
Brokeback Mountain (2005) .... Ennis Del Mar
The Brothers Grimm (2005) .... Jacob Grimm
LorRAB of Dogtown (2005) .... Skip
The Order (2003) .... Alex Bernier
Ned Kelly (2003) .... Ned Kelly
The Four Feathers (2002) .... Harry Feversham
Monster's Ball (2001) .... Sonny Grotowski
A Knight's Tale (2001) .... William Thatcher
The Patriot (2000) .... Gabriel Martin
Two HanRAB (1999) .... Jimmy
10 Things I Hate About You (1999) .... Patrick Verona
Paws (1997) .... Oberon
With the exception of Brokeback that back catalogue has nothing to warrant the kind of hype his early death created. Pretty much all of them were flops or unheard of films.
Had he not been in TDK coming later that year would there have been such a big deal about his final perfomance in The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009) saying he hould be nominated etc when nobody had seen the film as it hadn't been released yet?