― scott seward, Saturday, 7 April 2007 02:51 (nineteen years ago)
― tremendoid, Saturday, 7 April 2007 03:01 (nineteen years ago)
― lfam, Saturday, 7 April 2007 03:01 (nineteen years ago)
― Eisbaer, Sunday, 15 April 2007 00:11 (nineteen years ago)
― DavidM, Sunday, 15 April 2007 19:46 (nineteen years ago)
― JW, Sunday, 15 April 2007 19:50 (nineteen years ago)
― Eisbaer, Monday, 16 April 2007 01:22 (nineteen years ago)
― Dr Morbius, Monday, 16 April 2007 13:29 (nineteen years ago)
― dan selzer, Monday, 16 April 2007 15:00 (nineteen years ago)
― Dr Morbius, Monday, 16 April 2007 15:08 (nineteen years ago)
Watching Dirty Harry on cable right now. Such a great movie...
― Elvis Telecom, Saturday, 2 February 2008 05:34 (eighteen years ago)
i've just watched all five this week (got the box set for xmas).
first three- great. dead pool- fun.
i can't believe someone up there repping for sudden impact, which we watched for twenty minutes then had to turn off.
― darraghmac, Saturday, 2 February 2008 13:57 (eighteen years ago)
ha i bought that box for my brother for his birthday
tcm were showing them all a few weeks back and it was the first time i'd seen sudden impact, and yeah agreed wtf? that film is just rong
dead pool also gets a wtf for the rc car chase
― DG, Saturday, 2 February 2008 14:01 (eighteen years ago)
yeah, but a fun wtf.
main difference in cool btwn first three and the last two- terrific seventies jazzy music vs awful eighties synth shite.
i'm not usually so tuned in to soundtrack but it really stood out watching them all in a row.
― darraghmac, Saturday, 2 February 2008 14:04 (eighteen years ago)
he has ahnold's terminator sunglasses in the last two though
― DG, Saturday, 2 February 2008 14:06 (eighteen years ago)
Schifrin's soundtrack is pretty essential
― Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 3 February 2008 18:17 (eighteen years ago)
Ultimate Dirty Harry box set on the way
― Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 19 March 2008 08:38 (eighteen years ago)
way to make my christmas present obselete :(
anyway, the ultimate box set would leave out the one made just to keep his lame girlfriend happy, no?
― darraghmac, Wednesday, 19 March 2008 14:15 (eighteen years ago)
Missed this, but I don't agree that Million Dollar Baby, True Crime, or The Bridges of Madison County suck badly--quite the contrary, even if you feel that the difference between good people and bad people is drawn too starkly in Million, and if True Crime feels improbable (it's supposed to), and if Bridges of Madison County worships Meryl Streep (I thought the ending particularly was beautifully played). Space Cowboys and Blood Work are harmlessly fun bad movies, and A Perfect World and In the Line of Fire don't suck as badly as most films of their respective genres, FWIW. My personal favorite is True Crime, but I'm a sucker for so much of that movie: The interview with the prisoner where he takes one-word notes for his "color piece," the fact that he's just the worst father in the world, the performance of the wrongfully accused, etc...
― Pete Scholtes, Wednesday, 19 March 2008 19:49 (eighteen years ago)
I like In the Line of Fire a lot too.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 19 March 2008 20:02 (eighteen years ago)
I would have voted Magnum Force, had I voted. I love the Dirty Harry movies. May not get the box set though, a man's gotta know his limitations.
― Bill Magill, Wednesday, 19 March 2008 21:43 (eighteen years ago)
this would have been a hard poll for me. i love Magnum Force, High Plains Drifter, and Unforgiven, in such different ways.
― rockapads, Thursday, 20 March 2008 03:49 (eighteen years ago)
Clint on politics, Spike Lee, Harry Callahan, and everything
― Elvis Telecom, Friday, 6 June 2008 19:10 (eighteen years ago)
shame on a nigga who try to run game on a nigga
― Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved, Friday, 6 June 2008 19:46 (eighteen years ago)
http://www.thebadandugly.com/2009/03/14/first-look-the-human-factor/
― Dr Morbius, Monday, 16 March 2009 14:16 (seventeen years ago)
watched "heartbreak ridge" today & it was fuckin awesome
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 26 April 2009 18:48 (seventeen years ago)
i'm STILL surprised that every which way but loose got ANY votes, much less three -- the monkey movies are clint's nadir.
― Richardson Richardson (Eisbaer), Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:21 (seventeen years ago)
fuckin awesomely terrible
― I'm crossing over into enterprise (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:22 (seventeen years ago)
xpost. I know! What a film. He has so many quotable bad-ass put downs in that film!
"Sergeant, you get that contraband stogie out of my face, before I shove it so far up your ass you'll have to set fire to your nose to light it."
― Suggesteban Cambiasso (jim), Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:25 (seventeen years ago)
describing a "dusky girl" from hong kong (?) as "a real crossway breezer".
When the cop says to him when he gets out of the court, "You're gonna pay full price rummy. I don't believe in no serviceman's discounts" and he replies "Too bad, your old lady does".
― Suggesteban Cambiasso (jim), Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:27 (seventeen years ago)
xxp u mad ~maaaybe it dragged a little & final battle stuff isnt v. interesting but eastwood was so damn funny and there were so many good scenes
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:28 (seventeen years ago)
yeah there was so much quotable shit no way i could keep up but was constantly loling
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:29 (seventeen years ago)
Trying to get in touch with his feminine side by reading women's magazines while stalking his ex-wife by waiting outside her place of work in his car.
― Suggesteban Cambiasso (jim), Sunday, 26 April 2009 19:30 (seventeen years ago)
PLAY MISTY FOR ME
― m coleman, Sunday, 26 April 2009 20:08 (seventeen years ago)
Highway: I been pumping pussy since Christ was a corporal. I can tell you, the best damned poontang I ever paid for was in Da Nang. The girls were checked out daily. And we got ourself laid in a safe, orderly, proficient, military manner. That is until some suckhead writes home mama and says he dipped his wick in the Republic of South Vietnam. Then the shit hits the fan. A committee of congressmen who asshole to asshole who couldn't make a beer fart in a whirlwind, start telling your basic-ass-in-the-grass, Marine " No more shore time ". We responded in true Marine Corps fashion. We salute, do an about face, double time back to the boom-boom garbage dump where we get the clap, and the drip, and the crabs and a generally poor attitude towards the female of the species. War is hell, boy. That's a fact!
― johnny crunch, Sunday, 26 April 2009 23:15 (seventeen years ago)
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090601/gottlieb/single?rel=nofollow
Though he was born in San Francisco, he missed the summer of love, LSD, the sexual revolution and all the spoils of American bohemia because he was too busy combating evil and moral relativism in the name of justice. Sacrifice demands recognition. In contemporary American cinema, Clint Eastwood is our perennial Last Man Standing. But what is he standing on, or for, and why is he so eager to hide it? ....
The traditional Eastwood hero--and Clint, for all his bluster, has never played a villain--spends an inordinate amount of time pushing other people away, only to grudgingly accept the perseverant embrace of the outside world, as long as the world is defined exclusively in terms of his suffering. If Eastwood is to be credited for artistic and emotional growth, his mythic doppelgängers must learn to accept a love that asserts itself without conditions. He has publicly reduced his political credo to "everyone leaves everyone else alone." That philosophy is a reason to become a hermit. It's a reason to vote for regressive taxation and Second Amendment rights. It's not a reason to make movies.
― Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 20 May 2009 15:07 (seventeen years ago)
1967 interview...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDVzK8IthCs
― Elvis Telecom, Friday, 24 July 2009 08:42 (sixteen years ago)
J.Ro on White Hunter Black Heart:
http://www.movingimagesource.us/articles/a-free-man-20091201
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Friday, 18 December 2009 19:04 (sixteen years ago)
was 80 yesterday.
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 1 June 2010 18:24 (sixteen years ago)
Paint Your Wagon! Ah, yes! Where you may see Clint Eastwood & Lee Marvin in their most cringeworthy roles ever. Rent it today, as a tribute to his 80th birthday. Crank up the DVR and die a little inside.
― Aimless, Tuesday, 1 June 2010 18:31 (sixteen years ago)
Watched the last 40 minutes of Where Eagles Dare on TCM yesterday and was a little surprised how boring it was. I think they were going for terse and understated, but even the guy falling 1000 feet from the gondola was like "YAAAAAAAHHHHHH...eh, whatever."
― Grisly Addams (WmC), Tuesday, 1 June 2010 18:33 (sixteen years ago)
Recently saw The Beguiled. A haunting and interesting film. What are peoples' takes on the gender politics of the thing? I can see it having both feminist and misogynist readings.
― rhythm fixated member (chap), Wednesday, 16 June 2010 15:13 (fifteen years ago)
Watched the last 40 minutes of Where Eagles Dare on TCM yesterday and was a little surprised how boring it was.
whaaaaaat
― Remember when Mr Banhart was a replicant? (darraghmac), Wednesday, 16 June 2010 15:16 (fifteen years ago)
Leo's J Edgar may have his Clyde Tolson:
http://insidemovies.ew.com/2010/12/08/armie-hammer-leonardo-dicaprio-clint-eastwood-hoover/
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 11 December 2010 03:59 (fifteen years ago)
wdn't have predicted this in the Every Which Way But Loose days:
http://www.towleroad.com/2011/03/leonardo-dicaprio-and-armie-hammer-film-very-passionate-kiss.html
― Fuck bein' hard, Dr Morbz is complicated (Dr Morbius), Friday, 18 March 2011 02:05 (fifteen years ago)
http://kristinburns.com/WordPressPhotos/PJ/DuranDuran_mg_4011.jpg
― incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 27 September 2011 03:41 (fourteen years ago)
weird.
was hereafter any good at all?
― akm, Tuesday, 27 September 2011 04:31 (fourteen years ago)
will return to acting as a baseball scout going blind:
http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Matthew-Lillard-Joining-Clint-Eastwood-Trouble-With-Curve-28893.html
― Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Friday, 27 January 2012 19:04 (fourteen years ago)
Dude kinda just won the Super Bowl ad derby.
― dead-trius (Eric H.), Monday, 6 February 2012 01:38 (fourteen years ago)
Definitely.
http://www.youtube.com/chrysler
― ‘Neuroscience’ and ‘near death’ pepper (Eazy), Monday, 6 February 2012 06:22 (fourteen years ago)
There are some takes that Pale Rider is a sequel to High Plains Drifter in the slight supernatural take on the stranger.
― earlnash, Sunday, 5 October 2025 00:53 (eight months ago)
It's bizarre to find out that the scriptwriter of High Plains Drifter was inspired by the murder of Kitty Genovese in 1964. I'd have to watch the film again to see what the connection is.
I'm sure there is an Italian western with the same premise of High Plains Drifter that predates it, but I can't think of which one it is right now.
― Josefa, Sunday, 5 October 2025 04:03 (eight months ago)
I think this is the connection (from wiki):
Two weeks after the murder, The New York Times published an article claiming that thirty-seven witnesses saw or heard the attack, and that none of them called the police or came to her aid...The incident prompted inquiries into what became known as the bystander effect, or "Genovese syndrome," a social psychological theory that states that individuals are less likely to offer help to a victim in the presence of other people.
Anyway, the premise of "High Plains Drifter" is kind of ingenious. And it was neat to see Anthony James pop up. I mostly recognize him from a "Naked Gun" movie, but Clint drew him out of retirement and cast him in "Unforgiven" decades after this movie. Also, some fun trivia: "It is notable that Anthony James's first and last major film appearances were each in Academy Award-winning films for Best Picture."
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 5 October 2025 13:01 (eight months ago)
Pale Rider felt creaky to me the one time I saw it (admittedly, on commercial TV) but this kinda makes me want to revisit it. And yeah, HPD rocks.
― She's the Tariff (cryptosicko), Sunday, 5 October 2025 14:08 (eight months ago)
Pale Rider has some great location footage, nb this is going to be a huge image because I can't use Imgur:https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNjYzNWEyODEtNzMzMy00Y2VjLTk3YzAtZmExNDE0YzljZjY3XkEyXkFqcGc@._V1_.jpghttp://www.dvdbeaver.com/film2/DVDReviews40/pale%20rider/large/large%20pale%20rider%20blu-ray12.jpg
It also has really subdued lighting - seemingly no lighting at all - which must have looked weird in the 1980s but feels refreshingly modern. In comparison Heaven's Gate looks nice but the use of fog filters and ND filters dates it to the 1970s.
There weren't very many mainstream Hollywood Westerns in the 1980s. Silverado, Young Guns, and that was about it until Dances with Wolves came along. It was one of those dead genres, like the sung-through musical or the World War Two film. It's just a shame that Pale Rider wasn't a better film.
― Ashley Pomeroy, Sunday, 5 October 2025 18:33 (eight months ago)
I didn't dig Pale Rider the last time I saw it. Felt ... dull?
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 5 October 2025 18:36 (eight months ago)
watched pale rider last night, was blindsided by just how good it looks (had not seen this thread until now). kind of the default clint eastwood western besides that but man the production design and landscape photography carries it. definitely adding it to my 'good movies to zone out to' list
― ciderpress, Saturday, 25 October 2025 16:35 (seven months ago)
His son says he has retired
https://www.worldofreel.com/blog/2026/5/31/happy-birthday-clint-eastwood
― Alba, Tuesday, 2 June 2026 12:43 (six days ago)
And at a mere 96, what is he going to do with all his spare time?
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 2 June 2026 12:56 (six days ago)
Talk to chairs
― Cow_Art, Tuesday, 2 June 2026 13:07 (six days ago)
Manoel de Oliveira completed six more feature-length films after he turned 96, (and was actually completing one a year going back to 1988!) on top of ten shorts and documentaries. I haven't seen many of these, but The Strange Case of Angelica from 2010 (completed when he was 101!) remains a favorite, one of the greatest films he ever made.
I don't believe any filmmaker of merit was going to match Oliveira, but it wouldn't have surprised me if Eastwood came close. He had a good shot at that, but when Zaslav came aboard Warner Bros., he immediately pushed back on the support Eastwood had enjoyed in the past - it wasn't enough to stop him from making films, but it likely made things more difficult. (Haven't seen all of his recent work, but the last ones I caught were Richard Jewell and Cry Macho, and I thought both had plenty of merit, enough to make them worth seeing. Juror #2 had its fans too, but I missed what was a paltry, brief theatrical release and haven't been motivated enough to stream it, especially since I don't have HBO Max or whatever it's called now.)
― birdistheword, Tuesday, 2 June 2026 23:56 (six days ago)
It's better than the last two.
― boners for bombs (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 June 2026 00:01 (five days ago)
Actually just checked and Juror #2 was the ONLY movie he was able to make under Zaslav, who was incredulous that WB financed Cry Macho (before he became CEO) and snapped at the other executives who defended their decision, telling them "we don't owe him anything."
― birdistheword, Wednesday, 3 June 2026 00:09 (five days ago)