The author of a new biography of filmmaker Michael Cimino, Charles Elton, is the guest. The book is called “Cimino: The Deer Hunter, Heaven’s Gate, and the Price of a Vision” (Abrams Books, 2022). The books if available wherever books are sold.
The director Michael Cimino (1939–2016) is famous for two films: the intense, powerful, and enduring Vietnam movie “The Deer Hunter”, which won Best Picture at the Academy Awards in 1979 and also won Cimino Best Director, and “Heaven’s Gate”, the most notorious bomb of all time. Originally budgeted at $11 million, Cimino’s sprawling western went off the rails in Montana. The picture grew longer and longer, and the budget ballooned to over $40 million. When it was finally released, “Heaven’s Gate” failed so completely with reviewers and at the box office that it put legendary studio United Artists out of business and marked the end of Hollywood’s auteur era.
Or so the conventional wisdom goes. Charles Elton delves deeply into the making and aftermath of the movie and presents a surprisingly different view to that of Steven Bach, one of the executives responsible for “Heaven’s Gate”, who wrote a scathing book about the film and solidified the widely held view that Cimino wounded the movie industry beyond repair. Elton’s “Cimino” is a richly detailed biography that offers a revisionist history of a lightning rod filmmaker. Based on extensive interviews with Cimino’s peers and collaborators and enemies and friends, most of whom have never spoken before, it unravels the enigmas and falsehoods, many perpetrated by the director himself, which surround his life, and sheds new light on his extraordinary career. This is a story of the making of art, the business of Hollywood, and the costs of ambition, both financial and personal.