Month: March 2019

GROWLS AND ‘SWELLS’: A CLINT EASTWOOD ANALYSIS (PART 19)

EPILOGUE: JUST ONE MORE…

3 years, 10 months, and 8 days ago…. that’s when this silliness started.

The plan to sift through all (at the time of commencing) 57 of Clint’s films from the moment he truly broke out with Leone was never meant to take this long. The length could be attributed to the practical explanation of personal reasons, and it certainly isn’t not a factor. Yet there is a more relevant reason. During the time spent with revisiting the iconic figure’s achievements, yours truly has been trying hard to contemplate how much this series would even do towards understanding the films of Clint. There is the undeniable notion that he is a filmmaker truly stuck in his ways, for better and for worse. It is something, as a fan, that I never really wrestled with until writing this series. Eastwood’s films throughout do indeed possess thematically outdated methods even if the overall intent is relevancy. That combined with the outpouring of brilliant and intelligent approaches to film making in the proceeding 3 years, films like Eastwood’s do force even an ardent fan to raise an eyebrow.

There has always been the observation in this series that Eastwood’d art has done a better job than most at possessing an overall balance in terms of relevance and which side it aligns with. That somehow it shows the whole and not one side or the other. Since writing the series however, 3 new films from Eastwood have been released, and while they do their best to balance, the result may not always be so clean. It is unclear who holds that bag: Clint for not observing the material carefully or intentionally choosing what he does, others be damned. In a way it is admirable, a man of his age and station throwing caution to the wind before he departs. But I personally find it troublesome. Many filmmakers in their twilight years did either daring work or settled into their audiences comfort zone. Eastwood, in this day and age, possesses a very specific general audience and my fear is that he is too comfortable with them in a way he wouldn’t be 15 years ago.

With that, lets have a look at his three most recent films. All three are based on true stories and all three have something intriguing to look at. At the same time, it may show a place where a diligent and hardworking director may be working too hard. I’ll let you be the judge as we look at a miracle on the water, a travelogue of heroism, and the fall of a generation.

SULLY
3.5 outta 4 People Bracing For Impact Thanks to Pesky Birds

The Miracle on The Hudson was an interesting subject to tackle. The big question going through minds was how to take this brief but memorable news piece into a feature film. What Eastwood and writer Todd Komarnicki did was decidedly inventive. The film cleverly follows Captain Sullenberger (Tom Hanks) as he deals with the bureaucratic fall out of his landing of a commercial airliner safely in the Hudson River after the engines were disabled. The film not only shows the landing, it repeats it… a lot. And thankfully for good reason, as the consistent recollection acts as a tool for Sully coming to grips with his new found fame and whether or not he is responsible by NTSB Ruling. It handles PTSD in an interesting way that is thanks to the editing and Eastwood’s ability behind the camera to create tension for a moment in history we already know the outcome of. He gives the film a proper balance on intimacy along with scope. Much like a local news story or a small item in the paper, it captures severity with a tight knit feel. By the end, you walk out triumphant, in a way that few of Eastwood’s latest outings have left you.

THE 15:17 TO PARIS
1 outta 4 Tours Of Europe

Sigh…. there is no way to write this without feeling like an utter ass. The fact that the real life heroes who stopped a terrorist attack on a train heading for Paris portrayed themselves in the film is both admirable and part of the problem. The real life men are heroes in every sense of the word, but throughout the whole film I was taken out by their admirable attempt at portraying themselves. It might be because, strangely, it never feels authentic. I don’t think it is their fault… this ones on Eastwood. Eastwood’s film is attempting to do two things. One is trying to lend authenticity to the piece with the actual heroes in place of actors, which has never proven consistent decent results for the reason that… well… they are not actors who dig deep into each scene. The authenticity only feels like a casual recollection and not a purge into the truth of their inner struggles and journeys prior to stooping the attack. The second is Eastwoods attempt at Cinema Verite, or a documentary feel and arc to provide a sense of realism. It is fascinating watch Eastwood attempt the realistic approach, but it falls into the trap of not having actors who truly engage in the scene and not having much sense of direction. I will give the film this though: in the grand scheme of Eastwood’s storied career it is the most interesting to ponder from a technical and behind the scenes perspective.

THE MULE
3 OUTTA 4 Burner Phones

THE MULE feels like it should be the culmination of something legendary in cinema. It also feels like a retread of something we saw 10 years ago in GRAN TORINO. Eastwood coming back to acting (along with directing) in this film feels like a disappointment only in the sense that it is entirely possible that at this point you feel fatigue from his persona. Interestingly though, his portrayal of a 90 year old horticulturist who becomes a mule for a Mexican drug cartel is incredibly subdued. Is that the acting or is it real life. Maybe it’s both. The films biggest problem is landing on a platform it can explain. Much like Gran Torino, it deals with an older generation failing to adapt and understand the present. And much like Torino, it uses similar devices to get its points across. But they feel muddled and unsure of how to speak. Is Eastwood satirizing Boomers and their language, or is his archaic attitude meant as a positive affirmation? In TORINO, the lines are much clearer. In THE MULE, there’s an identity crisis that is either intentional or overlooked by the writer and the director. Outside of that dilemma, the films melancholic approach to regret and reckoning is as present as it ever is in Eastwood’s films, with some very tense and thrilling moments between the lulls. In addition, out of all the work Eastood has done behind the camera in recent years, this film feels both visually and stylistically like a film he would have shot in the 70’s. There’s a nostalgic and episodic feel that was fascinating to watch unfold. Once it’s all said and done and Eastwood’s character meets his fate, you leave the film wondering (and possibly hoping) this is the last time. The character in many ways seems to reckon with Eastwoods archetype, and if this is where it ends, there are worse ways for it to end then this.

—–

With that, we are caught up with a hardworking person who never seems to stop. I feel relieved.

Part of me feels that my admiration for Clint, while not dwindling or gone, has changed to a more clearer understanding of how I and the rest of the world view his work. While I wont hesitate to sit down and watch one of his films again, I may indeed be more careful to pick and choose.

In the end, it feels like anyone who has read this will not walk away satisfied. You may not like how much I praised him, you may not like how much I criticized and called him into question, or you may not like me (which is totally fair).

To paraphrase a line in THE MULE:

“For whatever it’s worth… I’m sorry for all this”

FIN?

The Scream Factory Crypt Part 20: The Critters Collection

Welcome to the Scream Factory Crypt! In this binge series I will be watching all my Scream Factory titles I own alphabetically! Scream Factory is my favorite imprint of Blu-Ray’s because they take movies that studios and the public might not adore but have fans and deserve to be given respect. This will take a long time as I have over 120(!) titles and counting, I know I will have more before I finish, so stay tuned!  Not only will I talk about them on the podcast but I will review them here as well so you can see how I feel about aspects of each release.

After a long hiatus I am back! (I haven’t gone anywhere, you can read my thoughts on my favorite Blu-Ray releases of 2018 on our site). I also planned to have this review up much earlier, but I didn’t expect the sci-fi-horror/comedy/B-Movie Critters Collection to be some jammed packed with extras. Huge props to Scream Factory for giving this film series quite the release. The 20th part of The Scream Factory Crypt is, The Critters Collection!

The Critters Collection contains the four Critter films for your viewing pleasure. And while each film varies in quality they all are quite fun.

Released in 1986, Critters is a fun film that finds devious little monsters running amok in rural America. The “Crites” are evil little boogers who escape imprisonment and make their way to Earth. Soon they are chomping their way through a farm with violence and glee.

All the actors are aware of the movie they are in, but they sell the film. Dee Wallace is great, so too is Scott Grimes as the son, Brad who of course is the first to notice the Critter menace. As the Critters further their attack they soon unleash other abilities, such as shooting poisonous quills.

One aspect of Critters that works surprisingly well are the cheap but awesome puppets by The Chiodo Brothers. When I say cheap, I don’t mean the quality of the effect but the way the movie works on a minuscule budget. They look silly but somewhat scary at the same time.

Critters is a fun, solid B-Movie that is a blast to watch.

The success of Critters on home video gave way to the sequel, Critters 2: The Main Course. Director/Co-Writer Mick Garris turned up everything in Critters 2, making it a winning follow-up to the first film.

The Crites are back and they are hungry! After some of the Crites eggs are thawed during an Easter celebration, it’s up to Brad, and alien bounty hunters to stop the menace.

Critters 2 leans a lot more into the comedy aspect of the first film. Where Critters had some pretty dark elements, the Main Course decides to go sillier. It doesn’t however make for a less satisfying film. Garris keeps the film moving at a brisk pace, never truly slowing down.

I’m not sure if Critters 2 is a better film then the first one, it is however a solid follow up for fans of the franchise.

The fun that is Critters 2 doesn’t find its way into Critters 3. Already a low budget series, Critters 3 is the lowest of the low. After watching the special features evidently this film and Critters 4 were shot back to back to save money and boy does it show. The Crites are now in Los Angeles and one would think it would open up the world of Critters but no it shows the limitations. With a lesser budget the Critters pop up less making their absent very noticeable.

Critters 3, is however more infamous for being the first film that Leonardo Dicaprio. Normally I would say to actors, don’t be ashamed just own it. But I understand why DiCaprio wants nothing to do with this boring entry into the Critter saga.

Critters 4 takes the fur balls into space to continue their feeding! The Critters franchise would never recover from the misfire of Critters 3 and 4. Moving the action to space seems like a natural progression for the series.

Like Critters 3, the fourth part suffers from the Critters not wreaking havoc for an extended amount of the run time. Even after their first appearance there is another long gap before they return again, and the only reason to watch Critters is to watch them eat and cause problems. Which makes their absence all that more egregious.

The video transfer for Critters and Critters 2 are brand new 2k scans and the results are awesome. It is so cool that Scream gave these cult classics a fresh coat of paint. The colors are rich and full of pop. The films look sharp and clear. After seeing Critters recently on DVD the new scans are most welcome. Gone are the undefined and murky look of SD, in their place are stunning new transfers.

Critters 3 and 4 are not afforded the same 2k scan and instead just given a slight upgrade over their DVD counterparts. Although the results are not as good, Critters 3 and 4 look better then they probably have any right to.

The audio won’t blow you away but the discs get the job done. Again the first two films sound leaps and rolls better. The dialogue on all films are clear and the Critters squeaks and gibberish sound great.

The extras on this set are extensive. Each film gets a making of documentary, the first two films documentaries clock in at over an hour and both are absolutely great. Critters 3 and 4 doc are shorter but are a lot of fun to watch. Almost all the major players are present and they share some truly great stories.

Critters also has “For Brian” an honest and heartfelt tribute to the writer of Critters who passed away in 2010.

Critters contains two commentaries the first featuring producer Barry Opper and star Dan Opper, the second featuring the always entertaining special effects artists the Chiodo Brothers.

Both Critters and Critters 2 feature some classic behind the scenes footage. Critters 2 also includes some SD cut footage, basically extended scenes from the film.

Critters 3 has a commentary from Opper and Opper, with Critters 4 also offering a commentary with director Rupert Harvey.

All films include trailers and a still gallery.

At the end of the day, The Critters Collection offers great B-Movie fun. The first two films are bonafide cult classics. Critters 3 and 4 can’t overcome their low budget restraints but do have some fun moments with the furry monsters. Scream Factory has given the fans of these films something they will surely devour.

Critters

Film: B+

Video: A

Audio: A

Extras: A+

Overall: A

Critters 2: The Main Course

Film: B+

Video: A

Audio: A

Extras: A+

Overall: A

Critters 3

Film: C

Video: B

Audio: B-

Extras: A

Overall: B-

Critters 4

Film: C

Video: B

Audio: B-

Extras: A

Overall: B-

The Critters Collection

Films: B

Video: A-

Audio: A-

Extras: A+

Overall: A-

 

For the Love of God, Stop Making Long Movies

In the past couple of months, I’ve been working my way through the Top 250 Films on Letterboxd. And at this point in my cinematic life, I’ve seen all of the English Language films and all of the “obvious” film. You know foreign films that, if you watch foreign films, you have already seen them. Like “8 1/2”, “Seven Samurai”, “Oldboy”, the works. So now I’m on to the lesser known films. The kind of stuff that I watch, and where I will usually like them in some capacity, I will bring them up to my film history professors and they will have never heard of them. An example of this is “Marketa Lazarová”, a German-Czech film that is amazing! I approached my film history professor and asked him what he thought of it and he had never heard of it. So I’m in that territory now. This territory also contains one of the worst things any film completionist fan can run into. The dreaded 3 hour plus film.

Now don’t get me wrong. There are a few times that a 3-hour film can be great. For example, my opinion for the most flawless film of all time is Lawrence of Arabia. But my god. Most of these films are so needlessly long.

If you ever want a good laugh, go check out the comments on Letterboxd’s Top 250. They are always arguing over the stupidest garbage that doesn’t matter because they all like jerking themselves off over how right they are. The argument this week is over whether or not a film called “La Flor” should be included in the list. “La Flor” is a film that screened at the New York Film Festival last year and was a film I was able to see. Another element of “La Flor” that you should be aware of, is that “La Flor” is 14 hours long. That’s right! A 14-hour long film. And you were beginning to get worried over “Avengers: Endgame” being around 2 hours and 50 minutes.

Here is another thing about “La Flor” that you should know. “La Flor” is hot garbage. It would be amazing if it was 2 hours long. But it’s not, and it does not need 14 god damn hours for it to tell it’s message.

I’ve seen so many films recently that are over 3 hours long that have no right to be that long. I got shit to do movie. I am giving you my time. Don’t be so god damn long for no reason. Hire a god damn editor you pathetic excuse of a cretin. “La Maman et La Putain”? You were good, but you could have been great if you were an hour and a half. “The Best of Youth”? Hot damn you don’t need to be 6 hours long. “Celine and Julie go Boating”? Why don’t you instead go cutting the pointless shit out of your movie? Often times the worst part of a good film is the runtime. And I am so god damn tired of going to see a movie that is over 3 hours long and having to sit through a worthless conversation. Figure out what is necessary and cut the rest out you meaningless liquid spine. God damn.

You can make an amazing film with multiple themes also an hour and a half. “Blindspotting” proved this last year. So stop making your films so fucking long when at the end of the day, the point of the film is ‘I’m sad and my wife won’t suck my dick’, get over yourself you Italian Prick. God damn.

GROWLS AND ‘SWELLS’: A CLINT EASTWOOD ANALYSIS (PART 18)

LAST CHAPTER: The Remorse of the Man From Malpaso

“Did Pa used to kill folks?”
-Penny Munny, daughter of known thief and killer William Munny.

In the 25 years since the American release of the Dollars Trilogy, Clint Eastwood managed to carve out a career that spanned many genres and levels of quality. He experimented and tinkered as much as many person in his position could without tarnishing an image that could easily be seen as a hindrance in expanding the mind and heart. Despite the aggressive and machismo tone his work possessed, there was never a lack of reckoning or self awareness. Still… he must’ve been wanting to send a much clearer message.

So when he finally picked up a script from David Webb Peoples that had been sitting in his possession since the 80’s un-read, he saw a better chance to do so than others that had presented themselves before.

The result of picking up that script was UNFORGIVEN. It is perhaps the most known of Clint’s work outside of the Leone work, the Dirty Harry films, and….. his work with Clyde. It operates as the ultimate mark in Clint’s thematic style, a style that he continues to work with to this day: a world of regret and reckoning. Nearly every film Clint has directed since UNFORGIVEN has tackled this topic and has led him to some of the most interesting and even baffling directing choices one could expect from just some tough guy leading man. What makes UNFORGIVEN the most prevalent is that it is a bold and unabashed attempt to dismantle a legacy he has in cinema.

Let’s get that rating out of the way first.

UNFORGIVEN
4 OUTTA 4 WAYS TO SPLIT THE REWARD.

We open on a short description of the known thief and murderer, William Munny (Eastwood), and how his late wife had reformed him from vice and sin. Living alone with his children on a pig farm that is barely making ends meet, a young man aware of Munny’s reputation asks him to accompany him on a mission of vengeance and reward. The job in question deals with gunning down two men who had slashed a prostitutes face at a saloon in the town of Big Whiskey. Reluctantly, Munny ventures off to claim the life and reward with the additional help of his old partner Ned Logan (Morgan Freeman), where all three will reckon their views on violence as they face off against the myth of the West and the violently flawed arm of the law that is Little Bill Daggett (Gene Hackman). The story of UNFORGIVEN has a lot to unpack not just for Eastwood and his mythos, but the way we view the Western as a whole. The term Revisionist and Post Modern is thrown around as a label. Personally, I offer it up as simple and savage Realism (though frankly, all labels are appropriate and dependent on preference).

Clint, through his direction and People’s script, offers a true reckoning for men who were our unabashed heroes. It puts them (and the audience) in the uncomfortable position on facing our blood lust and its consequences. Nearly every moment of the film contains an intelligent and emotionally mature crack at answering questions many never bothered to ask of the genre. How does a man who leads a life like Blondie, Manco, or Joe live with their frequency in taking lives for personal gain? More importantly, are they even able to find peace? And even if they do, what is the price of keeping that peace? The story possess a dual sword of Eastwood’s character being free from alcohol since his wife saved him on the whole, which gives his performance an extra thematic heft that more than delivers despite being on the nose. It’s probably the point, as Eastwood clearly wants to make sure his audience is understanding that this isn’t a fun romp.

A major note in this whole affair is the absolute destruction of mythos. While it is strewn throughout, it is virtually at it’s most fascinating when Eastwood is off-screen and our attention is drawn to Hackman’s Little Bill and his encounter with English Bob (Richard Harris). Harris’ braggart gunslinger rolls into a town where he is forced to reckon with his own gloating to a biographer that has been dictating his story of ‘heroism’. It is swiftly and brutally kicked in mercilessly by Little Bill, and Eastwood’s staging of that brutal beating is a man clearly expressing his contempt for these ideal myths that ignore the essential truths. Yes, there are many other ways to read this entire film, and that scene in particular from societal perspective, but from a purely cinematic perspective it is a direct statement on what happens when myth goes too far without actual understanding. It’s a premise that has been further examined in various ways since UNFORGIVEN, most eloquently since by Joel and Ethan Coen’s more current body of work (No Country For Old Men, True Grit, The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs).

The last, and possibly most important, is how Munny comes to terms with who he is. The finale of UNFORGIVEN is very much a man who becomes unhinged from the thing that kept him on the straight and narrow. For all the good he thought he could do by staying away from drink and vice in order to carry out one simple killing, he very much is aware that when he chose to ride to the job that he chose to break his moral high ground. He not only gives into drink by the time he goes back for a final stand off with Little Bill, he has changed completely. He has ceased to be kind and timid in speech, unleashes a slew of cursing, and is not above from playing games with the people on the other end of his gun. Does he realize he will never truly reform? Are the stories about him the definition of him as an actual person? Is his existence solely based on the hearsay and recollections of others? By the time he has blown away Little Bill and rode off from the town of Big Whiskey in the rain and mud, we are only hoping that it can’t be all true. That he is all bad. That he must feel pain for what he does.

The films post script is a final ambiguity while addressing the late wife of William Munny. It reads:

Some years later, Mrs. Ansonia Feathers made the arduous journey to Hodgeman County, Kansas to visit the last resting place of her only daughter. William Munny had long since disappeared with the children… some said to San Francisco where it was rumored he prospered in dry goods. And there was nothing on the marker to explain to Mrs. Feathers why her only daughter had married a known thief and murderer, a man of notoriously vicious and intemperate disposition.

In the end, UNFORGIVEN never asks you to refuse and throw away these Western archetypes, instead it does ask us to not confuse heroism with virtue.

A more apt way to tie the ribbon on Clints archetype (and this series as a whole) is an exchange between Munny and the about to be deceased Little Bill.

Little Bill: I’ll see you in hell, William Munny.

Munny cocks the Spencer Rifle pointed at Little Bill

William Munny (nodding his head slightly): …. Yeah.

———–

Next Time: Where are we now and where can we possibly go from here.

GROWLS AND ‘SWELLS’: A CLINT EASTWOOD ANALYSIS (PART 17)

EPISODE 17: The Bromance At Cinecittà

It is said somewhere in the far west, in the mid 1960’s, a modestly successful television actor found out in a newspaper he was a sensation overseas in Italy. The praise of an eager Italian audience was for a job the actor took while on hiatus for his television show. That summer at the industrious (if not supremely respected) Cinecittà Studios, a small yet intense Western was made that would change the television stars life and the Western genre for decades to come.

Undoubtedly, the actor looked at the news and uttered in a gruff manner, “Swell!”

——

We can speculate to the end of time what may have happened if Clint Eastwood hadn’t decided to take a chance in going to Italy to star in a series of Westerns by a then unknown Sergio Leone. Would his stint on Rawhide led to anything bigger? Perhaps. Would the Western genre still have changed dramatically with A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS if original choice Charles Bronson had accepted the role of Joe? Perhaps (although I genuinely have a hard time thinking of that notion without a burst of laughter). Undeniably, we have to always look at this as one of those oft told instances of timing and luck. That serendipity on which Hollywood and film making lore thrives upon to retain it’s place in the worlds history books. For many, nothing beats a triumphant story of something coming out of nowhere and changing the game for the better. The turbulent but productive working relationship between Leone and Eastwood created tones and notions to the Western genre that we continue to witness today.

The films of THE DOLLARS TRILOGY are bold experiments in limit pushing, released at a moment in history that relied too heavily on outdated heroics and antiquated limits. When the films all arrived into American cinemas months apart from each other in 1967, they were met critically with the conditioning of antiquated taste. Among the expletives thrown around by the critics of that era was the term “Spaghetti Western”, as if to dismiss this European attempt at what was considered a genre that shouldn’t be touched by hands outside the U.S. They detested, among many things, the brutality of its hero and the brutality he conducts.

Clint’s portrayal of “The Man With No Name” (an utter misnomer, as he has a name in each one of the films despite donning the same wardrobe) sparked a flame of true and raw Western attitude. His cowboy status is actually of a con man gunslinger who still stands for something. An Anti Hero if there ever was one, his characterization added much needed depth as discussed in previous articles. In the Dollars Trilogy specifically though, it is unhinged. Few moments with him in these films show emotional vulnerability, and the majority lends heavily to Leones brutal and (realistically accurate) view of the attitudes and mentalities of the West.

Today of course, “Spaghetti Western” as a term is more positively synonymous with the necessary evolution of genre that had been rotting in television for the better part of a decade prior to the Bromance at Cinecittà that ushered in more possibilities for Westerns and cinema as a whole. It’s the legacy that Eastwood will carry even beyond his mortal years, and one I imagine he shares more than gladly with Lone in his head and heart.

The Trilogy itself, shows progression and development along the way. Each film is a step forward that adds more heft and weight as they move along. And it is more than interesting to watch that unfold back to back to back.

So lets experience the evolution of a genre in one big burst as we see the exploits of Joe, Manco, and Blondie.

(Note: all the films are 4 stars, as each possess their own strengths that make them great individually, so we will forego the silly arbitrary rating system for this article).

A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS

Essentially a Western set remake of Kurosawa’s YOJIMBO, A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS tells the story of Joe (Clint), also known as ‘The Stranger’ riding into the town of San Miguel and plays both sides of a bitter rivalry between two factions vying for control in the town. Along the way, Joe’s double dealing takes a toll that must be rectified with vengeance come films end. The film is truly the baby step in the whole affair, starting with a fairly simple Western premise that leans heavily on the grungy and greedy side of humanity with Eastwood looking out for himself. When the film does turn to traditional characters turns, they are not without ambiguity and a brutal beating. This film virtually kicks the door open for these antiheroes, and Eastwood kicks the door down pretty beautifully. His presence sells it. It’s the thing he has in his back pocket ever and always. Any other actor put into this role at that time would have been laughable. The stoic poise that carries undeniably rage is present throughout his scenes and combined with Leone’s gift with the Close Up, you watch an Icon be birthed in your very presence. You see in that very film how you can give a man like him the career he’s had for how long he’s had it.

FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE

If A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS was a baby step, FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE is a bigger step towards and into adulthood. Eastwood plays Manco, a brutal bounty hunter with no penchant for how he gets the job done. Manco is on the trail of El Indio (Gian Maria Volonté), a ruthless criminal with an equally ruthless gang. Coincidentally, El Indio has another bounty hunter on his trail in the form of Col. Douglas Mortimer (an amazing Lee Van Cleef), who may have more than just a reward weighing on his mind and heart. Mortimer and Manco eventually team up and pursue the bounty together with the result being an all out fight to victory both material and personal. FEW DOLLARS MORE not only ups the ante on the violence and the broader abilities of storytelling, it adds wonderful character dynamics. It is more noticeable in Van Cleef, who’s character holds back in a much more aware way than Clint’s character can. Yet within those few vulnerable moments where Clint’s dynamic is given an extra coating of empathy and contemplation, you see that antihero get an extra dose that makes this second outing more than just the middle of an influential trilogy. It wouldn’t be unfair to say this film may be the most interesting because it balances simplicity and complexity rather well in the most surprising way.

THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY

As many times before in this series, we are walking into the “Cave of Classic’s” (No, I dont like that term either, but here we are ladies and gentlemen). THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY is of the most, if not the most, iconic film in Estwood’s career. Where the first two film is the trilogy have more than strong footing, the final film in the Dollars trilogy has entered the public language in a way few films manage too from it’s breathtaking visuals, superb cast, and iconic score by Ennio Morricone (who also scored the first two). The story follows Blondie (Eastwood), Angel Eyes (Lee Van Cleef), and Tuco (the genius Eli Wallach). Three selfish men of dastardly deeds who are all in search of a stash of gold buried in the Sad Hill Cemetery. What follows is a search for wealth amidst the backdrop of the brutality and devastation of the American Civil War, with our three titular souls reckoning with their roles in a world that has gone mad. In the film, the transformation of the new, brutal, and honest western is virtually complete. It’s secret new ingredient is thematic heft, giving the Blondie character a moment to tap into his personal opinions and beliefs while still keeping the image he holds in the first two. A particular scene involving a fallen Union soldier and Eastwood handing him a bottle of half drunk liquor as a message of comfort following a bloody conflict is more depth and range than half the Western characters that came before him would do in one movie. Added to that is a sense of humor, albeit dark and riddled with vicious intent. It’s a mode of humor that Clint would use later in his persona, and one he contributes to the greater chunk of more modern Westerns. It is an unquestionable masterpiece of film, and one that has not grown tiresome in the slightest.

——-

And when all is said and done, Clint left Cinecittà and the Spaghetti Western behind following his time with Leone. It is well known that the two clashed consistently and that Eastwood was ready to move on.

Sergio Leone reaped enormous benefits and frustrations from the collaboration, but was taken too soon in 1989. Around that time, Clint must have been reflecting on that and so much more. Because what he gave us three years later must have been his love letter to the Italian director who changed his life forever…. and we shall chat about it next time.

GROWLS AND ‘SWELLS’: A CLINT EASTWOOD ANALYSIS (PART 16)

EPISODE 16: SADDLE UP, PT.2

Hope you had a good rest there, pardner. Let’s pack up camp and get movin on down the prairie.

In our last installment, we were able to see Clint in a variety of situations regarding his iconic cowboy status. Stunningly, while the characteristics remain more or less the same on a base level, Clint was indeed able to maneuver between sub genres within the Western setting in a way that can only recall the studio contract players of yesteryear. Having started in the 1950’s, Clint was able to receive training from the traditional set and then gradually over the decades expand into more thoughtful territory. It may be what has kept him popular for so long. While not the acting of traditional masters and legends of the craft, Clints consistency is nonetheless admirable. That admiration can definitely be seen in the three films to be discussed today.

Covering three different decades at nearly ten years apart, these films show how his approach to the Western evolved from aesthetic to thematic. So lets mosey on in to town and take a gander at some local hanging’s, anti-war odyssey’s, and spiritual apparitions.

HANG ‘EM HIGH
3 OUTTA 4 PAT HINGLE’S

Mistaken for a man wanted for murder and cattle rustling, Jed Cooper (Eastwood) is strung up and left for dead, only to be saved in the nick of time. Thus propelling the audience of HANG ‘EM HIGH into a interesting world of vengeance. With the help of Judge Fenton (Pat Hingle), Cooper seeks out to capture alive the men who wronged him. Spoiler: none really survive. Yet the traditional revenge motif is clouded intriguingly by the themes of the old west that the film chooses to explore, of only for brief moments. One of the most thrilling is a simple conversation between Fenton and Cooper over the necessity to hang two people who assisted Clint in capturing a known murderer. Within the argument is a sense of actual thematic conflict beyond the “wronged man” arena, but sadly it moves away to quickly to actually be discussed. The same can be said for the people who actually wronged Clint, who have a few brief moments of actual regret and one particular scene of extrapolating their dilemma. Hence, while a much standard and of the time piece, HANG ‘EM HIGH shows the promise of compelling material for future films to explore.

THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES
3.5 OUTTA 4 MIRACLE ELIXERS

THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES has been touted as one of Clints greatest ventures into the western genre for fair reasons. A sprawling epic journey of a Confederate mercenary in a post- Civil War U.S. seeking retreat from a world filled with horror and personal tragedy that does still have enough in it so many years later. The films outlook on history is extremely embellished and assumed from a very certain point of view, let does have an eternally fascinating outlook on anti-war sentiments combined with the traditional Western tropes. Clints direction is one of the films two greatest assets, as he becomes contemplative with the genre for the first time (but certainly not the last). The road is hard in WALES and the characters suffer intensely before any possible reprieve is achieved, and Clint makes you go through every mile of it without loss of detail. The other stand out is the incredible turn by Cheif Dan George as Lone Watie, a Native American who joins Wales on his journey. Its a role that is interesting to watch, given the tone and attitude of the story, and stands out as easily the films best acting performance. Ultimately, THE OUTLAW JOESY WALES still stands as a prime example of what the best westerns can do, even if it has aged in regards to many of its attitudes.

PALE RIDER
3.5 OUTTA 4 PEOPLE FINDING GOLD IN THEM HILLS

PALE RIDER is the last western Clint participates in that goes in and out of theatrical existence without fanfare or hurrah or significance. If one were to know that after this there would only be one final statement, I wonder how the reaction might’ve been in advance. As is with Clints career, he just seems to keep moving with very little regard for any sentimentality in favor of reflection (regardless of how warped or aged). RIDER’s tale of The Preacher (Eastwood) defending and emboldening a community of miners from the oppression of a Mining Tycoon wanders around a blend of dreary myth and harsh reality. The former is key, and not just for the simple fact that Clint’s character is a Ghost. The film pushes a narrative of the hand of fate via the prayer of a young girl that leads to the salvation of the struggling miners at the hand of , what the film wants us to see is, harsh lessons. A lot of it works, but the key areas where it doesn’t are represented in picking and choosing areas of faith and struggle to focus the lens on. The cost of this ghosts violence is tethered tightly to the old stamina of “good vs evil”, thus lacking much tangible tension. All that aside, it’s a bold outing that does a better job at its balancing act than you would expect, with great performances from Michael Moriarty and Sydney Penny. Add to that, yet another example is on display here of Clint’s ability to photograph a Western in profound ways.

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Now let’s stop off at the Saloon to settle after a long day of trekkin. When we get back to moving forward, we’ll actually go backward to discuss the relationship between Clint and an Italian master of the Spaghetti Western.

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