Celebrated Hollywood actor Val Kilmer, known for his intense performances and iconic roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and Heat, died of pneumonia, his daughter Mercedes Kilmer confirmed.
The American actor, also famed for his performances in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, Tombstone and as Jim Morrison in The Doors, died at the age of 65.
Kilmer rose to stardom in the 1980s and 1990s, earning a reputation for his dedication to his craft as well as on-set tensions with directors and co-stars.
“When certain people criticise me for being demanding, I think that’s a cover for something they didn’t do well,” he told the Orange County Register in 2003. “I believe I’m challenging, not demanding, and I make no apologies for that.”
His breakthrough came with the 1984 comedy Top Secret! and the sci-fi comedy Real Genius (1985), but it was his portrayal of “Iceman” in Top Gun (1986) that cemented his star status. Decades later, he reprised the role in Top Gun: Maverick (2022) alongside Tom Cruise in what would be his final film.
Kilmer also took on the challenging role of Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone’s The Doors (1991), using his own singing voice for the film.
He was married to British actress Joanne Whalley, his co-star in Willow (1988). The couple had two children before divorcing.
Michael Modine thanks Kilmer for ‘Full Metal Jacket’ role
The actor Matthew Modine has shared a lengthy tribute to Kilmer on X/Twitter.
Sharing a documentary clip, Modine explained that Kilmer helped him land a role in Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket.
He wrote: “RIP Val Kilmer. If it wasn’t for our chance encounter at the Source in 1985, I may never have been cast in FULL METAL JACKET. Thanks, Val.”
Greg Evans2 April 2025 07:52
Val Kilmer’s nostalgic final video before death recalled Batman role
Kilmer starred in the Joel Schumacher film alongside Jim Carrey, Nicole Kidman, Tommy Lee Jones and Chris O’Donnell, who played Robin. He only starred in the one Batman film, succeeding Michael Keaton in the role. George Clooney replaced him for Batman & Robin two years later.
In the clip, he can be heard telling his followers while holding the makeshift mask over his face: “I’m ready.” He adds: “It’s been a while.”
Jacob Stolworthy reports below:
Greg Evans2 April 2025 07:43
James Woods praises Kilmer’s ‘many wonderful performances’
Woods, best known for his roles in Videodrome and Once Upon a Time in America, paid tribute to Kilmer on X/Twitter highlighting his role in the 1993 western Tombstone.
The actor wrote: “His rendition of Doc Holliday in Tombstone was what every actor dreams of achieving. So many wonderful performances. Sad to lose him so soon. RIP Val Kilmer.”
Greg Evans2 April 2025 07:39
Top Gun on X/Twitter: ‘RIP Iceman’
The X/Twitter account for the Top Gun movies has posted their tribute to the star.
Sharing an image of Kilmer from the original 1986 film the post read: “Remembering Val Kilmer, whose indelible cinematic mark spanned genres and generations. RIP Iceman.”

Greg Evans2 April 2025 07:31
Josh Brolin calls Kilmer a ‘creative firecracker’
On Instagram, Josh Brolin shared a picture of himself with Kilmer and thanked the actor for some “amazing memories”.
In the caption, The Goonies actor wrote: “See ya, pal. I’m going to miss you. You were a smart, challenging, brave, uber-creative firecracker. There’s not a lot left of those. I hope to see you up there in the heavens when I eventually get there. Until then, amazing memories, lovely thoughts.”
Greg Evans2 April 2025 07:25
Michael Mann praises ‘brilliant’ Kilmer
The director Michael Mann, who worked with Kilmer on the 1995 crime thriller Heat, has praised the actor and called his death “tremendously sad”.
In a statement to the Hollywood Reporter: Mann said “While working with Val on Heat I always marvelled at the range, the brilliant variability within the powerful current of Val’s possessing and expressing character. After so many years of Val battling disease and maintaining his spirit, this is tremendously sad news.”
Greg Evans2 April 2025 07:16
Val Kilmer’s career lows: Turmoil on ‘The Island of Dr Moreau’ and Hollywood’s backlash
Val Kilmer followed up with The Saint (1997), transforming himself with wigs, accents, and disguises, before starring in The Island of Dr Moreau (1996) alongside Marlon Brando – one of Hollywood’s most notoriously troubled productions.
The chaos on set, detailed in the 2014 documentary Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley’s Island of Dr Moreau, included a hurricane, Kilmer clashing with director Richard Stanley, and Stanley’s abrupt firing via fax – only for him to sneak back on set disguised as an extra.
Kilmer and Brando frequently rewrote scenes, with Brando telling him, “It’s a job now, Val. A lark. We’ll get through it”.
Kilmer later wrote that it was one of his saddest experiences on a film set.
By 1996, Entertainment Weekly dubbed him “The Man Hollywood Loves to Hate”.

Directors Joel Schumacher and John Frankenheimer, who salvaged Dr Moreau, called him difficult, with Frankenheimer declaring he would never “climb Mount Everest or work with Val Kilmer again”.
Other artists came to his defence, like DJ Caruso, who directed Kilmer in The Salton Sea and said the actor simply liked to talk out scenes and enjoyed having a director’s attention.
“Val needs to immerse himself in a character. I think what happened with directors like Frankenheimer and Schumacher is that Val would ask a lot of questions, and a guy like Schumacher would say, ‘You’re Batman! Just go do it,”‘ Caruso told The New York Times in 2002.
Namita Singh2 April 2025 06:48
Val Kilmer on playing Batman: ‘It was a struggle to get a performance past the suit’
One career nadir for Val Kilmer was playing Batman in Joel Schumacher’s goofy, garish Batman Forever with Nicole Kidman and opposite Chris O’Donnell’s Robin – before George Clooney took up the mantle for 1997’s Batman & Robin and after Michael Keaton played the Dark Knight in 1989’s Batman and 1992’s Batman Returns.
Janet Maslin in The New York Times said Kilmer was “hamstrung by the straight-man aspects of the role”, while Roger Ebert deadpanned that he was a “completely acceptable” substitute for Keaton.
Kilmer, who was one and done as Batman, blamed much of his performance on the suit.

The Times was the first to report his death on Tuesday.
“When you’re in it, you can barely move and people have to help you stand up and sit down,” Kilmer said in his documentary Val.
“You also can’t hear anything and after a while people stop talking to you, it’s very isolating. It was a struggle for me to get a performance past the suit, and it was frustrating until I realised that my role in the film was just to show up and stand where I was told to.”
Namita Singh2 April 2025 06:35
‘I have lost and found parts of myself I never knew existed’
Val Kilmer, who took part in the Method branch of Suzuki arts training, threw himself into parts. When he played Doc Holliday in Tombstone, he filled his bed with ice for the final scene to mimic the feeling of dying from tuberculosis.
To play Morrison, he wore leather pants all the time, asked castmates and crew to only refer to him as Jim Morrison and blasted The Doors for a year.

That intensity also gave Kilmer a reputation that he was difficult to work with, something he grudgingly agreed with later in life, but always defending himself by emphasising art over commerce.
“In an unflinching attempt to empower directors, actors and other collaborators to honor the truth and essence of each project, an attempt to breathe Suzukian life into a myriad of Hollywood moments, I had been deemed difficult and alienated the head of every major studio,” he wrote in his memoir, I’m Your Huckleberry.

In a 2021 documentary on his career he said: “I have behaved poorly. I have behaved bravely. I have behaved bizarrely to some. I deny none of this and have no regrets because I have lost and found parts of myself that I never knew existed.”
Kilmer, the youngest actor ever accepted to the prestigious Juilliard School at the time he attended, experienced the ups and downs of fame more dramatically than most.
His break came in 1984’s spy spoof Top Secret! followed by the comedy Real Genius in 1985. Kilmer would later show his comedy chops again in films including MacGruber and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.
His movie career hit its zenith in the early 1990s as he made a name for himself as a dashing leading man, starring alongside Kurt Russell and Bill Paxton in 1993’s Tombstone, as Elvis’ ghost in True Romance and as a bank-robbing demolition expert in Michael Mann’s 1995 film Heat with Al Pacino and Robert De Niro.
Namita Singh2 April 2025 06:15
Actors pay tribute to action star
In a post on Instagram, actor Josh Gad paid tribute to action star Val Kilmer.
He said: “RIP Val Kilmer. Thank you for defining so many of the movies of my childhood. You truly were an icon.”
Actor Josh Brolin, son of James Brolin, said he was going to miss his “pal”.
“You were a smart, challenging, brave, uber-creative firecracker,” he said in an Instagram post.
“There’s not a lot left of those. I hope to see you up there in the heavens when I eventually get there. Until then, amazing memories, lovely thoughts.”
Namita Singh2 April 2025 06:02