Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday in Tombstone.Image via Buena Vista Pictures
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André Joseph
Published 18 minutes ago
André Joseph is a movie features writer at Collider. Born and raised in New York City, he graduated from Emerson College with a Bachelor's Degree in Film. He freelances as an independent filmmaker, teacher, and blogger of all things pop culture. His interests include Marvel, Star Wars, Ghostbusters, Robocop, wrestling, and many other movies and TV shows.
His accomplishments as a filmmaker include directing the indie movie Vendetta Games now playing on Tubi, the G.I. Joe fan film "The Rise of Cobra" on YouTube, and receiving numerous accolades for his dramatic short film Dismissal Time. More information can be found about André on his official website.
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There are lines in cinema history that remain forever etched in the minds of moviegoers. The ‘90s, in particular, were full of badass moments spoken from megastars, like Arnold Schwarzenegger’s “Hasta la vista, baby” from Terminator 2: Judgment Day to Keanu Reeves’ “What do you do? What do you do?” from Speed. But then there’s the low-key simplicity of Val Kilmer’s dangerous charm when his depiction of the tuberculosis-ridden Doc Holliday in Tombstone speaks the immortal line “I’m your huckleberry."
The 1993 Western epic from George P. Cosmatos (Rambo: First Blood Part II, Cobra) came at a time when the once dormant genre saw a resurgence thanks to the Oscar-winning successes of Dances With Wolves and Unforgiven. Featuring an impressive A-list ensemble led by Kurt Russell as legendary Old West lawman Wyatt Earp, Tombstone not only beat out Kevin Costner’s rival movie to theaters by a year but also earned greater critical acclaim. Tombstone holds a 76% certified fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes in contrast to the Costner-led Wyatt Earp’s rotten 31%. The film’s success can largely be attributed to Kilmer’s revolutionary performance as Holliday, turning the terminally ill gunfighter into the most dangerous man in the West.
Val Kilmer Is the Real Star of ‘Tombstone'
Unlike Costner’s Wyatt Earp, which told an expansive narrative about the lawman’s life, Tombstone’s screenplay by Kevin Jarre narrows the scope to the events surrounding the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in the Arizona town and the subsequent violence that follows. Much of the film is centered around Earp’s long friendship with Holliday, the bond between his brothers Virgil (Sam Elliott) and Morgan (Bill Paxton), and his attraction to traveling theatre performer Josephine Marcus (Dana Delany). Though Russell is the established star of the picture, Kilmer easily steals almost every frame from Tombstone’s ensemble.
By most historical accounts, the real Doc Holliday lived two lives: One as a highly educated Southern gentleman dentist and the other as a compulsive gambler known for starting trouble in public. Kilmer’s methodical background of acting marries the two lives of the gunfighter into a sly but sick aristocrat aware of death lurking at the corner. Yet, Holliday does not allow his illness to suppress his vices nor his quick impulses towards violence. Kilmer detailed his attraction to the Holliday role in his 2020 book I’m Your Huckleberry: A Memoir, where he compared the gunfighter’s appetite for a duel to the way “this gun-obsessed nation that we love remains mired in a dilemma centered on pistols and rifles with romantic ties to our murderous past”.
From the moment he appears in the middle of a high-stakes poker game, Kilmer’s Shakespearean-like approach to Holliday’s dialogue fits the Western period naturally without ever going over the top. Out of any standout moment that made the late Top Gun star’s career legendary, it was the first time Holliday intervened in a stand-off between the Earp brothers and intoxicated outlaw Johnny Ringo (Michael Biehn) in the middle of town. The brothers avoid Ringo’s challenge to a duel. However, Holliday steps out of the shadows during a shaving session with all the confidence in the world as he responds softly, “I’m your huckleberry."
Doc Holliday’s Illness Is His Most Dangerous Weapon
Holliday’s unforgettable “huckleberry” line against Ringo isn’t cold scowling like Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry saying “Make My Day” in Sudden Impact, nor is it played for tongue-in-cheek levity like any classic James Bond one-liner. Kilmer delivers the line like an informal upper-crust gentleman and physically postures in a way that speaks no fear of death. If the simplistic subtlety of dialogue can allow the audience to fully grasp the personality of a character on screen, then lines can be read in between those three words of who exactly Holliday is: A man ready to die, but not without taking his enemies with him.
Before Tombstone, few heroes in the Western genre made an offbeat impression on the genre as Kilmer did as Doc Holliday. The stars often fell into the categories of playing righteous lawmen in the tradition of John Wayne or the dangerous, but principled gunfighters that Eastwood portrayed without a badge restraining them. Holliday did not just stand out because he had cool lines. He was the ultimate Old West superhero in that the illness that’s killing him every day is used as a cover for his lethal ability to fool his enemies, whether it's at the poker table or in a duel to the death. Despite his loyalty to Wyatt Earp, Holliday is the complete opposite of the famed lawman because he makes his suffering the most powerful weapon in his arsenal. His words against any man who challenged him were not merely empty threats. They were a spoiler.
Tombstone is streaming on Prime Video in the US.
Tombstone
Like Follow Followed R Western Action Release Date December 25, 1993 Runtime 130 minutes Director George P. Cosmatos Writers Kevin Jarre Producers Bob Misiorowski, James JacksCast
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Kurt Russell
Wyatt Earp
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Val Kilmer
Doc Holliday
A successful lawman's plans to retire anonymously in Tombstone, Arizona are disrupted by the kind of outlaws he was famous for eliminating.
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