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A tribute to Clint Eastwood
To mark a major Clint Eastwood retrospective at the BFI Southbank, Adam Lee Davies provides a decade-by-decade survey of the great man’s life in film
1940sClint Eastwood’s route to stardom reads like a Hollywood publicist’s dream. A childhood spent travelling through the grim, dusty majesty of rural California as his father sought factory work informed young Clint’s feeling for sweeping moral landscapes. Follow that up with a host of menial but rugged proletarian gigs such as steel worker and lumberjack that instilled in him an intense feeling for the plight of the average Joe. Cap his adolescence with a spell in the army during which he survived an air crash and heroically swam the three miles back to shore, and you’ve already got a resume any of the anodyne actors that currently fug up our screens would kill for. And this isn’t even to mention the easy charm and good looks.
High: Mythic childhood.
Low: Actual childhood.
1950s
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Eastwood’s eventual arrival in Hollywood coincided with the birth of television and the demise of the studio system. Those handsome features, his physical presence and gravity-defying quiff soon landed him a contract with Universal, but he failed to parlay this into any great success. The minor roles he did score were the likes of First Saxon in ‘Lady Godiva of Coventry’ (’55) and Dumbo Pilot in hand-wringing travelogue ‘Escapade in Japan’ (’57). Little could he have known what a stroke of luck it was when in 1959 he was cast as vacuous cowpoke Rowdy Yates in TV series ‘Rawhide’. Though he has often dismissed the role as nothing more than a randy sidekick, it was a part that would bring him to the attention of a certain Italian director.
High: Jet squadron leader in creature-feature ‘Tarantula’.
Low: Tom, a ranch hand in forbidden-lust oater ‘Star in the Dust’.
1960s
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High: ‘God is not on our side because he hates idiots also.’ ‘The Good…’.
Low: ‘I talk to the trees.’ ‘Paint Your Wagon’.
1970s
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High: Squaring off against David Soul in ‘Magnum Force’.
Low: Those bloody monkey films.
1980s
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High: As full-time dreamer ‘Bronco Billy’ (’80).
Low: Opposite Burt Reynolds in Prohibition-era no-no ‘City Heat’ (’84).
1990s
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High: The solemnity of ‘Unforgiven’.
Low: Two words: ‘Absolute Power’.
2000s
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High: All those Oscars.
Low: ‘Blood Work’.
Clint Eastwood season runs at the BFI Southbank throughout August. (020 7928 3232/www.bfi.org.uk)
Author: Adam Lee Davies
User comments on this story
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- amnesty V Bush said...
- a solid and decent director, but a limited act or who can't get beyond gnashing his teeth and mumbling his words in an attempt to be appear dramatic, enigmatic and interesting. Away from his playthings- a horse or a gun -he looks like a kid who has had his rattle taken away. Posted on Aug 09 2008 17:39
- Report as inappropriate
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- fanboy said...
- Pale Rider...........Remake of Shane with a bit of High Plains Drifter thrown in?? Brilliant though Posted on Aug 08 2008 11:45
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- Technoguy said...
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Clint Eastwood single handedly revived the western form with his Spaghetti Trilogy,High Plains Drifter,
The Outlaw Josey Wales,Unforgiven.He translated and
updated this into the urban cowboy genre,Dirty Harry.
He made excellent smaller films like Bronco Billy and
Escape from Alcatraz,Thunderbolt and Lightfoot.His
directorial films showed what he'd learned from Siegel:
Play Misty For Me,Outlaw Josey Wales,Perfect World,Unforgiven.Now in full fruition with Mystic River,
Million Dollar Baby and Letters from Iwojima and some. Posted on Aug 06 2008 11:10 - Report as inappropriate
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