Don't really know how anyone can make an assertion this was suicide based on the extremely limited amount of information any of us have to go on. Disregarding his state of mind (which none of us could know) and activities directly prior to his death and going strictly on some snippets in the media is wild guessing at best, IMO.
He has been battling addictions problems for a long time. Perhaps the breakup with his longtime girlfriend and not being to have as much time with their kids drove him to a level of despair that few can understand. I don't know if he misjudged how much he could do now compared to how much he did when he was using regularly or He intended to check out. A bad hotshot will stop your heart almost instantly. Hence the needle in the arm. Addiction is a disease you have to fight 24/7. Your never "cured". You just count and bless the days your sober. I feel the most for those little'uns.
I thought that Phillip Seymour Hoffman was such a good actor--especially for his roles in The Big Lebowski and Capote--that I doubted the rumor that Woody Allen was seriously considering him for a leading role in a remake of The Gary Busey Story.
(these are "actors", people. Hollywood celebrities and so forth. they are not the characters they play. neither was John Wayne, Bob Hope or Bing Crosby.)
(in Medieval Times, jugglers, jesters, troubadours and minstrels would have been whining to the sovereign for equal press-time)
Best character actor of his generation. Heck, maybe best character actor, period.
It's an overdose. He's an addict. With smack you never know what you're getting. I know two people who died of heroin overdoses in Norman.
Here's a good article from the New York Times on the varying strength and availability of heroin today.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/04/ny...?smid=fb-share
Billy Bob Thornton or Bruce Dern might beg to disagree.
No . . . Different generation.
They would get their PR guy to kick one's ass to disagree.
(maybe we should "Ask Elvis" . . ? =)
(and don't neglect to remember Edward Everette Horton
who, rather than injecting heroin,
did voiceovers on
"Rocky and Bullwinkle Present: Fractured Fairy Tales.")
(apparently, some critics never experience TCM or that local PBS deal on Channel 14 =)
In all honesty, when I read the "OP/Headline" on this thread, for just a moment I confused Phillip S. Hoffman with the third guy in the triumvirate of acting excellence in "O! Brother Where Art Thou." (The one who was worried about his pal in the movie being turned into a toad.)
In retrospect, I suppose that all of this could be used as a good argument for medicinal marijuana.
(well . . . with the right celebrity spokesperson it could be. =)
My understanding is that heroin users frequently overdose after a long period of sobriety. I had a client who died that way. He used to use a whole lot. Then he was sober for a few years. One night he decided to have a big party, just for old time's sake. He shot up just like he used to. Only thing was, in the meantime his tolerance had gone way back down. The amount it used to take to get him high was now fatal. Died in minutes.
Phillip Seymour Hoffman may have been in the same situation.
Russell Brand: my life without drugs | Culture | The Guardian
I don't think we understand unless we've been there.
Addiction is just so sad. I can't imagine the kind of struggles addicts of all types must deal with. Be it drugs, alcohol, food, gambling, etc. I smoked for 10 years but quitting was actually really easy so I have no real frame of reference. I'll not judge because I don't know how it feels the HAVE to have something like that. No one that drinks their first beer thinks they're going to be an alcoholic. I'm certain Mr. Hoffman didn't think he was going to become an addict either. Its just so sad.
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