Behind the masked king in ‘Kingdom of Heaven’ was a superstar. And it didn’t even appear in the credits

If you go to Google and search ‘The Kingdom of Heaven’the film released in 2005 by Rydley Scott, the first thing you will find is a list of its cast. In it there are some superstar accounts (actors and actresses) that you may remember from the film and one that will not be familiar to you at all. And it is logical. In fact, if it were up to her to participate in the movie would never have been revealed. His goal was to interpret, embody one of the main characters and then take a step back. It wasn’t difficult if we take into account that, although his character is key to the plot, he shot all the scenes in a couple of weeks and hidden behind a mask. 21 years are nothing. In Spain ‘The Kingdom of Heaven’ premiered in 2005a whopping 21 years ago, but that does not mean that the work in which Ridley Scott (‘Gladiator’ or ‘Blade Runner’) tried to capture the spirit of the crusades of the 12th century and the later siege of Jerusalem of 1187 continues to make people talk even today. The last example is left by the website filmstartswhich has published an article delving into one of the most unknown curiosities of the film: the identity of the actor who played the king Baldwin IVa fascinating historical figure who ascended to the throne while still a child, died when he was just over 20 years old and had to face two formidable rivals: the Sultan Saladin and leprosy, an ailment that deformed and accompanied him for much of his brief existence. What’s so curious about it? The figure of King Baudouin IV is fascinating. His character in ‘The Kingdom of Heaven’ too. If you have seen the film you will remember that in almost all of his appearances he appears with his face covered by a silver mask. The brief scene in which he is not wearing it, we are shown a face so deformed by leprosy that his features are completely blurred. It doesn’t matter which actor is behind it. The makeup makes him unrecognizable. Taking into account that the real Baudouin suffered from the same illness, the use of the mask and makeup is more than understandable. What is less common is that when the film was released, in 2005, the actor did not participate in the promotion and his name was left out of the main credits. If you check them you will see Orlando Bloom mentioned, Liam NeesonEva Green, Jeremy Irons…, all with the characters they embody; but no sign of King Baudouin. Yes, Edward Norton. The most curious thing is that the mysterious performer was a top-level star. Behind Baudouin’s mask was hidden Edward Nortonwho was 36 years old at the time. If in 2005 Scott could boast of hits like ‘Gladiator’ or ‘Black Hawk Down’, Norton was not far behind. In the late 90s he had starred in ‘American History X’ and ‘Fight Club’ and just a few years before he had participated in ‘Red Dragon or ‘The Italian Job’. If Norton did not appear in the main credits and his participation was relegated to the background for the gallery, it was not because the director or producers of the film decided so. It was the actor himself who wanted to take a step back. His goal was to get into the filming of a blockbuster, see how Scott worked… and then discreetly disappear. Furthermore, since his character wore a mask, by doing so he trusted increase your halo of mystery. Click on the image to go to the tweet. How do we know? Because it was Norton himself who told the intrastory of his participation in the film several years later. To be more precise, he did it in February 2007, during an interview with Guardian. By then his participation in ‘The Kingdom of Heaven’ was already more than known and a reader asked him a question that movie buffs had been asking for some time: “How did you manage to participate in the movie and why didn’t you appear in the credits?” His answer is very simple: at that time his schedule prevented him from getting involved in the filming, but he wanted to see first-hand how Scott directed a project of such magnitude, so he accepted a role. Of course, not just any one. “Ridley Scott and I had been talking about making a movie for years, but it never happened. He asked me if I would play another role in ‘Kingdom of Heaven,’ but I was about to shoot ‘Down in the Valley’ and simply didn’t have the time. But I read the script and asked him who would play the man in the mask. He told me he was going to find someone who could imitate Ridley’s voice. James Mason. I told him he could imitate James Mason pretty well.” A tempting offer. As if that offer wasn’t attractive enough, Scott he assured him that the king’s scenes could be filmed in “just two weeks”, which would hardly interfere with the preparation of ‘Down in the Valley’. It was the push that Norton needed, who, beyond the nuances of the leper king character, he was interested in something else: “I wanted to see how a film of that magnitude was shot.” “I could have just gone to visit him (Scott), but I was curious if the process was different when it’s so busy. He certainly knows how to shoot films of that scale and is comfortable with it.” “It was worth it”. These are not the only revelations Norton made during the interview. The American actor acknowledges that he fulfilled his goal of seeing up close how Scott performed behind the cameras and recognizes that the effort was “worth it.” However, he believed that his name should not appear in the credits. At least that’s how it appears the answer which he shared in 2007 with Guardian: “I didn’t … Read more

The most legendary magician in history was not the most skilled, but a masked recklessness that revealed the secrets

If you lived the explosion of the private ones at the end of the 20th century, you lived the success of ‘Magic without secrets’, a program of Antena 3 in which A masked wizard executed classic illusionism on stage And then it meticulously revealed how he had done them. A broken taboo in front of the cameras that beat its responsible, Val Valentino, mortal enemies within the entertainment world. However, over time, the masked magician has found unexpected disciples: on the Internet, dozens of magicians They reveal without stopping The great secrets of magic. If illusionism has always interested, it has not stopped interesting that they tell us “how it is done.” And the masked wizard was the first to do it with a mass audience attached to the TV. Revealed magic In the 1990s, stage magic was … one thing. The scenario magicians were in the zenith of their success, with television specials that, from the eighties, They showed challenges to the laws of logic that fascinated the audiences. Were the times when David Copperfield The statue of freedom flew or disappeared, in which Siegfried & Roy -There are a tragic accident with a white tiger that would withdraw them from the stages in 2003- signed millionaire contracts in Las Vegas and in which even people like David BlaineAt the end of the decade, I was about to carry magic in an entirely new direction with its ‘Street Magic’. In that context, ‘magic without secrets’ came, a series of four specials of 1997 that in Spain issued Antena 3 and that did the unthinkable: explain how the apparently impossible classic tricks of illusionism were carried out. In them, a masked magician accompanied by the inevitable female assistants reviewed the entire repertoire of the magicians. As TV was what it was for those times, special attention was paid to the apparently more dangerous numbers: the magician was sawn in two, crossed with swords, swallowed fire, was shot and buried alive. Everything had a trick, of course, and explained. Double backgrounds, trucades, fire bullets, pussy sabers … The program did not leave triquiñuela without revealingbut the spectator had the feeling that he was accessing knowledge prohibited for a simple reason: the magician hid his features with a mask that remembered those of wrestling. The program was responsible for reminding us the code of the magicians to which the original title of the specials referred: ‘Breaking The Magician’s Code: Magic’s Biggest Secrets Finally Reveled’. Any wizard that broke it would immediately enter a black list of the guild, and would not work again. Black lists This detail is not necessarily true: much more prestigious magicians than this masking, such as the magnificent Penn & Teller, who in that decade were also overly unknown media figures, based on their numbers on revealing classic tricks … to take the enigma much further. They had also been controversial in the guild for playing the three balls and vessels With plastic containersallowing the secret to be seen, 0 revealing the Seven principles of magicand had unleashed a controversy that Even today it is between fans and professionals About whether to reveal the tricks power or fulminates magic. But although Total classics like Paul Daniels They had previously revealed tricks as part of their shows, no one had the media impact of the masked magician. Behind the program was Nash Entertainment, a producer of doccu-realities with titles such as ‘The World’s Deadliest Volcanoes’, ‘World’s Most Dary Dad Rescues’, ‘World’s Scariest Police Shootouts’, ‘When Good Pets Go Bad’ or ‘Prisoners out of control’. ‘Magic without secrets’ became one of his greatest successes: In 1997, the first program was the most watched special in Fox’s history. But … who was the masked wizard? His identity was revealed in the fourth and last special and as expected, it was not a first -class wizard but rather the opposite. Its history seems the secret origin of what ended up being: a comic supervillain between magicians. Val Valentino had been fond of magic since childhood and when he was a teenager he made a number in an exchange program with schools around the world that gave him a considerable audience among the kids of his age. There he played to reveal the tricks as a way to surprise and enhance the effects. And he discovered that no magic game could compete with revealing the secret. In the eighties and nineties he had a moderately successful career as a magician, appearing on television specials and acting, of course, in Las Vegas. When the opportunity arose to shoot the specials for Nash recalled the impact their children’s revelations had and decided to use it in their favor: success was considerable, and although Much of the controversy that the programs were awakened was prefabricated by Fox (There was no “threat of death by secret groups of magicians”), there was some demand for scenario magicians such as Andre Kole or Kevin Spencer. They claimed that the masked wizard had made them lose hundreds of thousands of dollars with their revelations. The courts gave the reason to Valentino, since the secrets of the tricks are not protected by the laws of intellectual property, much less those who had been part of the magical public domain. Although the new century has already entered the show tried to be relaunched with new secrets and new magicians, it did not enjoy the popularity of the four original specials. And in fact, magic, thanks to the Internet, enjoys better health than ever. So no, Val Valentino did not kill magic. In fact, in social networks like Tiktok there are accounts that are dedicated to revealing without rest Small magic gameswhich has given them an unprecedented scope. As Valentino predicted (and Penn & Teller already knew), knowing the secrets does not ruin anything, because what counts is the execution and ingenuity. The Supervillain at the end was a hero, even in that he looked like a comic character. Header | Nash … Read more

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