Hidden Kiss Behind The Camera

Viggo Mortensen has always moved through the world like someone unwilling to live halfway. Before the fame, he crossed borders and scraped by, absorbing languages, jobs, and scars in equal measure. That restlessness hardened into a kind of radical sincerity, the same quality that later made Aragorn feel less like a character and more like a confession. So when he kissed director David Cronenberg in public—once after A History of Violence, again onstage at a Lifetime Achievement ceremony—it wasn’t a stunt to feed tabloids. It was a visible, unguarded moment between two men who had navigated darkness together on screen and off.

When Mortensen finally admits, “You could say that I’m not totally straight,” he isn’t courting controversy; he’s refusing a box. He has no interest in proving credentials to play queer roles or justifying the tenderness he shows another man. To him, the only measure that matters is whether the feeling is real. With Cronenberg, that reality looks like decades of artistic trust, the power to challenge each other, and the willingness to stand under blinding lights and let the world see a kind of love it still struggles to name.