
There is no Batman.” And so what kind of thing is that to play, a person whose job is to be as nonspecific as possible. “That’s why it’s so easy to have five or six Batmans,” he says now. Batman is meant to be so anonymous that the person who is looking at him can see himself in him. He understood then that Batman isn’t meant to be a real guy. They wanted to try on the mask and ride in the Batmobile. They wanted to see Batman, so Kilmer stuck around in the suit, but they didn’t want to talk to him. One day he was filming and about to take off the Batsuit when Warren Buffett and his grandkids came by.

Nevertheless, Kilmer shared an anecdote from the set of the third Batman film, and how it caused him to have a profound realization about the character: Kilmer tells the Times it was merely a “scheduling conflict” with his work on The Saint, but director Joel Schumacher still maintains that the actor is “psychotic.” While Kilmer was well-received by audiences in Batman Forever, he notably didn’t return for Batman and Robin as rumors of his penchant for being “difficult” on set began to build. One of those moments includes a look back at his short stint as Batman after both Michael Keaton and director Tim Burton refused to return for a third sequel. At first, the interview serves to publicize his recent memoir and an animated film that mines his lifelong obsession with Mark Twain and Christian Science founder Mary Baker Eddy (it’s a whole thing), but Kilmer ends up baring his soul and reflecting on his strange Hollywood career. Just days before the world completely shut down, Val Kilmer sat down with the New York Times for a bizarre, yet profound profile that only Kilmer can deliver.
