Upcommig Birthdays
Comming soon
|
Photos - Clint Eastwood
Clint Eastwood
|
|
 |
Directing for most movie stars is a sometimes thing, and more often than not is a form of self-indulgence. For Clint Eastwood, directing was something he was determined to do from his earliest days as an actor, and something he now perhaps needs to do more urgently than he needs to act. Woody Allen aside, no star has directed more often than he has--20 films--or with greater professionalism of the old-fashioned kind, which specifically rejects pride of auteurship. He is always on budget and usually ahead of schedule. Actors love working with him because, being an actor himself, he allows them to find their own way with just the occasional, supportive suggestion.
Clint learned to direct mainly by watching. Directors would come and go on Rawhide, the old pros and the young hotshots, the hacks and the caring craftsmen-and he studied them all. "The things that impress you, you remember and use yourself," he has said, "and the things that don't impress you, you discard." Clint completed his education with Sergio Leone, whose talent for panorama admired, and with Don Siegel, the veteran American action director with whom he made five films. Unforgiven, the picture for which Clint won his directorial Oscar, is appropriately dedicated "To Sergio and Don."
Of the two directors, the latter proved to be the more important influence. Clint, who is an impatient man, easily bored on a set, particularly loved Siegel's quickness. "He knew exactly what he wanted to shoot, and he would do no more. His influence on me was being decisive in what you want to do and what your program is for the film. He was terrific that way." Siegel, like most of the great American directors of the classic age, was a vernacularist, a man who worked in the humblest genres westerns, crime stories, science fiction. He cook strength from their sturdy conventions, while imparting to them freshness, energy, and conviction, through his efficient staging, his brisk cutting, his inherent belief in the viability of the action tradition.
Most of Clint's work has developed along these same lines. He started small with Play Misty for Me, a solid, scary story of obsessional love that he shot near his home in Carmel with a tiny cast (for luck, and in case he needed guidance he had Siegel play a small role in it). Next came Breezy, a sweet little May-September romance that starred William Holden and Kay Lent. He directed two other slightly more expansive films (High Plains Drifter and The Eiger Sanction) before tackling his first epic, The Outlaw Josey Wales, which is both a wonderfully confident film and the film that established beyond any doubt his credentials as a major director.
In the years since, Clint has directed just about every kind of movie westerns, comedies, cop dramas, even a biopic and it would be easy to categorize him simply as a genre director. But neither Pale Rider or Unforgiven is a conventional western; Bronco Billy is unlike most contemporary comedies in both tone and topic; The Gauntlet, with its befuddled, loser hero, unlike most cop pictures; Bird, much darker, less celebratory and sentimental than most movie biographies of artists. Maybe Honkytonk Man is a road picture, maybe at heart Heartbreak Ridge is a service comedy, White Hunter, Black Heart, a safari adventure, The Bridges of Madison County, an old-fashioned romance. But none fits neatly into a broad genre category.
Bird and Unforgiven are the most profoundly surprising and the most personal of his films. The former, a biography of Charlie Parker, the self-taught, self-destructive musician making his way up out of rural poverty to play his revolutionary music in the jazz clubs during the '40s and '50s, is Clint's weightiest movie. At once compassionate and objective, the film provides a meditation on the life and work of an artist that the director, himself a self-taught musician and a passionate devotee of modern jazz, admired from the first moment he heard him in concert in 1946. It pays full tribute to the man's genius and the sweetness of his spirit, yet offers no easy excuses or sentimental explanations for his suicidal behavior. Bird is ultimately as Clint sees it, a tragedy about a man refusing to take responsibility for himself and his gifts a quality that often elicits Clint's puzzled reflections, precisely because it is the opposite of his own way.
Unforgiven can be read as a movie in which Clint acknowledges responsibility for certain aspects of his own life. In essence, it is a story about the ways that men drift into violence through misunderstanding, through careless machismo, through misplaced pride and moral rigidity and the costs, unacknowledged in most movies, including (as he said when he was making it) some of Clint's own, of that behavior. It represents not an act of atonement, but rather a statement of self-awareness-brooding, ambiguous and, in the history of the western, quite singular in its immensity of emotion.
All of the films Clint has directed have in common a certain style and attitude-more of the latter than the former. In general, they possess a sort of unforced naturalism of manner that is glad to bend, even break, with strict realism as well as with strict generic conventions. Clint, the jazz aficionado, likes to riff, comedically or melodramatically, on a theme. He likes to do it straight-faced, effortlessly, without giving the audience a lot of warning or a lot of explanation when he does. Many times people miss the humor in what he does or the serious note he will sometimes strike without making too much of it. At heart, he is a subversive an elusive director who does not care to be understood too quickly, who actually prefers not to let his hand show at all. That, too, follows in the old, pre-auteur tradition of American movie craftsmanship.
Also he directed and won an Oscar for Million Dollar Baby (2004). Last films directed by Eastwood are Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) and Flags of Our Fathers (2006).
Director
- The Human Factor (2009)
- Gran Torino (2008)
- Changeling (2008)
- Letters from Iwo Jima (2006)
- Flags of Our Fathers (2006)
- Million Dollar Baby (2004)
- "The Blues" (1 episode, 2003)
- Mystic River (2003)
- Blood Work (2002)
- Space Cowboys (2000)
- True Crime (1999)
- Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (1997)
- Absolute Power (1997)
- The Bridges of Madison County (1995)
- A Perfect World (1993)
- Unforgiven (1992)
- The Rookie (1990)
- White Hunter Black Heart (1990)
- Bird (1988)
- Heartbreak Ridge (1986)
- "Amazing Stories" (1 episode, 1985)
- Pale Rider (1985)
- Sudden Impact (1983)
- Honkytonk Man (1982)
- Firefox (1982)
- Bronco Billy (1980)
- The Gauntlet (1977)
- The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976)
- The Eiger Sanction (1975)
- Breezy (1973)
- High Plains Drifter (1973)
- Play Misty for Me (1971)
- The Beguiled: The Storyteller (1971)
Awards
- Golden Globe Award Best Foreign Language Film "Letters From Iwo Jima" 2007
- Directors Guild of America Award Lifetime Achievement 2006
- Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award Best Picture "Letters From Iwo Jima" 2006
- National Board of Review Award Best Film "Letters From Iwo Jima" 2006
- Academy Award Best Director "Million Dollar Baby” 2005
- Academy Award Best Picture "Million Dollar Baby” 2005
- Directors Guild of America Award Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film "Million Dollar Baby" 2005
- Golden Globe Award Best Director "Million Dollar Baby" 2005
- National Board of Review Award "Million Dollar Baby" 2004
- National Society of Film Critics Award Best Picture "Million Dollar Baby" 2004
- New York Film Critics Award Best Director "Million Dollar Baby" 2004
- National Society of Film Critics Award Best Director "Mystic River" 2003
- The Actor Award Lifetime Achievement 2002
- Kennedy Center Honors Lifetime Achievement 2000
- Venice Film Festival Award Lifetime Achievement 2000
- National Board of Review Award Career Achievement 1999
- Honorary Cesar Award 1998
- Producers Guild of America Award Lifetime Achievement 1998
- American Film Institute Award Life Achievement 1996
- Irving G Thalberg Memorial Award 1994
- British Film Institute Fellowship 1993
- Academy Award Best Picture "Unforgiven" 1992
- Academy Award Best Director "Unforgiven" 1992
- Directors Guild of America Award Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film "Unforgiven" 1992
- Golden Globe Award Best Director "Unforgiven" 1992
- Los Angeles Film Critics Award Best Film/Best Director/Best Actor "Unforgiven" 1992
- National Society of Film Critics Award Best Picture/Best Director "Unforgiven" 1992
- ShoWest Award Director of the Year "Unforgiven" 1992
- Cannes Film Festival Award Technique "Bird" 1988
- Cecil B DeMille Award 1988
- Golden Globe Award Best Director "Bird" 1988
- People's Choice Award Favorite All-Time Motion Picture Star 1988
- People's Choice Award Favorite Motion Picture Actor 1987
- People's Choice Award Favorite Motion Picture Actor 1985
- People's Choice Award Favorite Motion Picture Actor 1981
- Golden Globe Award World Film Favorite (Male) 1970
Movies
City of Ember For generations, the people of the City of Ember have flourished in an amazing world of glittering lights. But Ember's once powerful generator is failing . . . and the great lamps that illuminate the city are starting to flicker.
Now, two teenagers in a race against time, must search Ember for clues that will unlock the ancient mystery of the city's existence, and help the citizens escape before the lights go out forever.
...
more...
I Woke Up Early the Day I Died Overcoming a nurse, and dressing in her clothes, a madman escapes from Hope Sanitarium. The world he is about to enter is crazier than anything he could have endured at the asylum, as we soon find out in I Woke Up Early the Day I Died, the last screenplay written by film legend Ed Wood before his death.
With an all star cast that includes Billy Zane, Christina Ricci, Sandra Bernhard, Tippi Hedren, Eartha Kitt, Ann Magnuson, Andrew M ...
more...
Actors
Latest Actor added Liev Schreiber Isaac Liev Schreiber was born on October 4, 1967 in San Francisco, California. He is an American Tony Award-winning actor.
In 1993, he made his Broadway debut in In the Summer House, followed by numerous off-Broadway productions. In 1994, Schreiber made his first film, Mixed Nuts, playing a transvestite opposite Steve Martin.
He recognized by moviegoers as Cotton Weary in the Scream series of horror films (1996-2000 ...
more...Upcoming birthdays June Allyson June Allyson born on October 7, 1917 in the Bronx, New York City and died on July 8, 2006. She was a Golden Globe-winning American film and television actress, popular in the 1940s and 1950s.
Though she despised the appellation "the girl next door," this was how June Allyson was promoted throughout most of her MGM career. The blonde, raspy-voiced actress was born in a tenement section of the Bronx. Her career nearly end ...
more...
Company
Gaumont TriStar Columbia Pictures Gaumont is a French film production company founded in 1895 by the engineer-turned-inventor, Léon Gaumont (1864-1946). It is the oldest running film company in the world. Originally dealing in photographic apparatuses, the company began producing short films in 1897 to promote its make of camera-projector. Léon Gaumont's secretary Alice Guy Blaché became the motion picture industry’s first female director. From 1905 to ...
more...
Regizor
Austin Chick Austin Chick was born in 1974 in New Hampshire, USA. He is an American film director, screenwriter and producer.
His first major film, which he wrote and directed, was XX/XY (2002), starred Mark Ruffalo and Kathleen Robertson.
He co-produced Sidney Lumet's 2007 film Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, starring Ethan Hawke and Philip Seymour Hoffman.
He directed and produced 2008’s drama August, ...
more...Upcoming birthdays Francis Ford Coppola Life and career (1960 to 1978) Francis Ford Coppola was born to Carmine Coppola, at the time first flautist for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and his wife Italia in Detroit, Michigan on April 7, 1939, the second of three children. Two years later Carmine became first flautist for the NBC Symphony Orchestra and the family moved back to suburban Long Island, where Francis spent the remainder of his childhood. Coppola had polio as a boy, leavin ...
more...
Festival
Rome Film Festival Festa Internazionale di Roma - RomeFilmFest: a great festival taking place in a great city. And not just a festival but a real feast for movie lovers and a great event for all those who work for cinema, show cinema, tell us stories through cinema.
Not just a great city, but the city of cinema par excellence, will host the Fest which will transform its centre - the Auditorium Parco della Musica - in the Parco del Cinema for nine days ...
more...
|
Menu
What is New?
|