Anton Yelchin died in a freak accident at age 27, but a new documentary seeks to put the focus back on the actor's extraordinary life.
"Love, Antosha," which arrives in theaters Friday, premiered earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, to tears and applause. His parents, Viktor Yelchin and Irina Korina, the driving force behind the documentary, were there as well.
The film is a heartfelt and unusually revealing tribute to the creative force of nature that was Yelchin. It is told through home videos, archival footage, personal letters and interviews by those who knew him, from his "Star Trek" companions Chris Pine, John Cho and J.J. Abrams, to Jennifer Lawrence, Martin Landau and Kristen Stewart, who said that he, "Kind of, like, broke my heart" at 14. It's a complex portrait of an artist, who liked to take provocative photographs at sex clubs in the Valley and was also, unbeknownst even to most of his closest friends, managing cystic fibrosis.
"We're trying to continue his legacy and we want people to know more about him not only as an actor, as a musician, as a photographer and a thinker and a friend and a beautiful son," Viktor Yelchin said in an interview this week. The Yelchins said they're pleased with the film, which reveals intricacies of their son's life that few knew.
Yelchin died in 2016 when his car rolled down his driveway and pinned him, prompting his parents to start gathering materials and even conducting interviews with people who knew him when they'd be in town. By the time director Garret Price came aboard to start the process of making a film, he said "50% of it was already there."
Price decided that he'd use Yelchin's letters as a framing device to tell a coming-of-age story through his eyes. Nicholas Cage does the readings of his letters.
"The challenge of a story like this is it ultimately ends in tragedy but I didn't want to make a tragic story," Price said. "I wanted to make an inspiring story."
An editor by trade, Price never met Yelchin, or directed a movie before. "Love, Antosha" producer Drake Doremus, who was very close to Yelchin and directed him in "Like, Crazy," thought a more objective eye would be good for the film.
By no means is his story told through G-rated, rose-colored glasses, either. The film delves into his creative and professional anxieties as much as it does celebrate his talent.
"Credit to his parents, they were very upfront and said we want to give you complete autonomy to tell the story. There was no pressure to deify Anton for an hour and a half," Price said. "I'd done documentaries where estates have been involved and challenges present themselves to showing the subject in the best light. But this humanizes him and makes him relatable."
Price said Yelchin was getting ready to make his cystic fibrosis diagnosis public. He'd hid it for so long because he "didn't want people to feel sorry for him." But he'd realized that perhaps letting people know that he was living with the disease could actually help others.
The film was a rush to get done, but Price said they were all motivated to keep Yelchin in people's minds.
"It was something we wanted to get done quickly because the world we live in moves so quickly," Price said. "We just don't want him to ever be forgotten."