Showing posts with label Clint Eastwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clint Eastwood. Show all posts

Saturday, October 2, 2021

Talking to an Empty Chair: The Decline of Great Director Clint Eastwood in Cry Macho

Film Reviewed: Cry Macho    

Director: Clint Eastwood

Date Watched: 19 September 2021

jamesintexas rating: *



I think this film is a travesty.  No one clearly told Clint Eastwood, a masterful director and storyteller, that his script here was unfinished, cliche-ridden, and devoid of genuine emotion.  He makes his 91-year old protagonist sexually attractive to not one but two women, creates genuine suspense by getting on a horse, survives a car crash with no effects, and wastes a wonderful Dwight Yoakum by not giving him enough to do.  I was so surprised by the ending; it feels like Eastwood made all the choices, took none of the feedback, and instead of any sort of climax, it whimpers away with a non-ending.  

Clint's character Mike Milo is a former rodeo rider with a tortured past, summarily fired by ranch boss Howard Polk (Dwight Yoakum) very early on.  A title card informs us of the passage of time, and suddenly, he is roped into traveling to Mexico in 1979 to bring Yoakum's son back to the US.  Feeling a life debt, Eastwood goes, and then he ends up bonding in a picaresque journey back with the son, Rafo (Eduardo Minnet).  A supposed meditation on aging and the twilight of a life, Eastwood's camera is at its best when it focuses on sun glares, fading light, and his profile set against dark shadows.  But it is really a mess with his character hiding behind a box to elude police, engaging in a low-speed chase where he hides from the cops, the aforementioned car crash, but the sheer fact of seeing 91 year old Eastwood working, moving, walking in a way that made me think of my grandpa is a testament to his strength and intensity as an artist.  I just wish this story was worth the massive effort it obviously took for him to make it and star in it.

I am a fan of Unforgiven, A Perfect World, Million Dollar Baby, and more (latter-day Eastwood, given my need to explore his early films).  I am unsure what Eastwood is doing in Cry Macho.  It is the cinematic equivalent of talking to an empty chair.  

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Sully Soars

Movie Review: Sully

Director: Clint Eastwood

Date: 12 November 2016

Rating: ***



Sully works best as a portrait of systems of synergy, the unique linking of teams of people that combined to save the day in New York City's post-9-11 world when birds flew into the engine of a plane forcing an emergency landing in the Hudson River. Strange is the film that has a very public (and happy) ending to it that an audience knows before going in, but Eastwood uses an interesting structure, complete with Sully's fantasies of what could have happened (the plane ripping through buildings in downtown Manhattan), while also unfortunately turning the NTSB into a needlessly evil and antagonistic opponent to the vaunted, cool under pressure Sully (Tom Hanks).  Hanks is very good here, compressing emotion into his face and into Sully's quick thinking along with his co-pilot (played by Aaron Eckhart).  But Eastwood is focused on their partnership and the systems that interlock and unite us and work together here, in a love-note to the people involved in saving so many in a situation that could have gone disastrously wrong.  There are the harbor boats with their quick maneuvering to the scene; there are the frog divers of the NYPD who skillfully enter the frigid waters and contain the emergency. There is Sully, walking through the waters of his sinking airplane, making sure that everyone is off of the plane, that everyone is safe, in scenes that are unapologetically and undeniably powerful.  Fighting off tears, I thought about the sheer terror of those moments, which is not diluted by our knowing of the happy ending.  It resembles Titanic in those moments, the collision of water and manmade craft, the rising water and inevitability of loss. 

I am disheartened by Eastwood's desire to demonize the government entity involved in investigating the landing.  I am also critical of his failure to end his movie well, choosing a light punchline from Eckhart instead of reaching for any deeper meaning or point.  He has this trend, which I do not love, of pulling back the curtain in his credits and showing the real funeral of Chris Kyle in American Sniper and here, the real Sully with his reunion with the passengers.  I'm reminded of Roger Ebert stating at the end of What's Love Got To Do With It?, when the director showed the real Tina Turner performing after seeing Angela Bassett belt her heart and soul out as the character for two hours, "Is this necessary?"  I am glad that Eastwood wants to examine shock and post-traumatic stress in our national identity, and I applaud the desire to set the context of 9-11 always in our minds with this event, with it being a September release.  My favorite moment was a quiet reaction from Sully to his co-pilot when they both had to step outside of the hearing to process some new information.  It is a soft conversation of low-key proportions, and the gratitude and acknowledgement of one character to the other is emotionally powerful.Eastwood remains a compelling and thought-provoking filmmaker, and Hanks proves himself completely capable in registering the complexity of the man and the moment when quick decisions saved countless lives.

Monday, July 2, 2012

J. Edgar + L. DiCaprio + C. Eastwood = Misfire.



Movie Review: J. Edgar

Director: Clint Eastwood

Reviewed: 2 July 2012

jamesintexas rating--**


With the pedigree of Leonardo DiCaprio, Naomi Watts, Armie Hammer, and Judi Dench, with the cachet of Oscar-winning director Clint Eastwood and Oscar-winning screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, and the tantalizing subject of one of America's most secretive public figures debunked, the film J. Edgar collapses under the weight of its own self-importance, pounds of garish make-up, and its unwieldy focus on the eponymous subject.  The film simply isn't sure what it wants to be.  Tell-all biopic?  Commentary on our post-9-11 world?  The movie about the Lindbergh baby kidnapping?  A study of repression within the one American who knew everyone's secrets?  A tragic love story?  After viewing this bloated film, I'm still not sure.

Clint Eastwood begins the film with promise: the (unknown to me) 1919 Bolshevik bombings of American houses and Senators, a coordinated attack of great power and a precursor of later day terrorism, which scars a young Edgar as he bikes by the carnage and picks up the leaflets left by the attackers.  DiCaprio's Edgar is a go-getter in the Bureau, a momma's boy who is fastidious about his wardrobe and socially awkward with a nervous stutter, yet conniving and relentless in his myopic pursuit of what he wants  A botched marriage proposal to secretary Helen Gandy (Naomi Watts) results in a lifetime commitment as his personal secretary and keeper of secrets.  Dinner every night with Mother (Judi Dench) influences Edgar's clothing and philosophies, as well as his self-loathing and guilt.  Friendship with Clyde Tolson (Armie Hammer) reveals him to be the crush that Edgar hires impulsively as Assistant Director and befriends while rebuilding the Bureau's reputation and his own wardrobe.  As a frame narrative, Eastwood shows an army of young male agents helping Edgar type his life story which is intertwined with the history of the Bureau and the rise of forensic science.  For as much time as Edgar is shown to be a visionary of law enforcement with his prescient belief in the integration of science into their work such as fingerprinting, Eastwood gives at least twice as much focus to Edgar's bloated, reptilian face and his waddling to the window during inaugurations as well as his cryptic blackmailing of presidents with his infamous files.  There's a lack of balance or just priority in this film.  For example, so much time is given to the Lindergh case, but without context, emotion, and clarity it is difficult to tell how the case enraptured the public's attention, the timeframe of the kidnapping and its investigation, the aftermath of its resolution.  Edgar rushes a federal law into place post Lindbergh kidnapping which Clint Eastwood seems to be drawing comparison to the Patriot Act, yet was making kidnapping a federal crime an example of overreach or just good politics?  Edgar menacingly states that rules have to be bent to find the criminals, and there's the implication that the Lindbergh killer may not even be guilty.  He seems to push for profiling and wire-tapping, all post-9-11 hot topics, though he stops the brutal beating of a suspect at one point, suggesting a disgust for violence?  Yet beyond these surface comparisons to modern day America, I'm not sure where Eastwood is going with this.  The film lacks the conviction to do much with Edgar's repressed sexuality and his close friendship with Clyde Tolson beyond hint and dodge.  A mid-film throw-down fight is welcome for its change of pace, but the blending of past and present becomes tiresome and artless, draining the film of any momentum or sense of time.  And a final scene loses any dramatic power, though a quotation chosen to end the film is intriguing.

Interesting points include Edgar's sheer terror at having met his match in the hands of Richard Nixon and, perhaps, some remorse at the natural result of his paranoia and wire-tapping, the Nixonian tactics that would lead to Watergate. Also, the relationship between Edgar and his loyal secretary Miss Gandy is one of great interest.  What drew Miss Gandy to Edgar?  Was she a lesbian?  Why the loyalty, even until the end?

However fun it is to consider the role of a public figure who served under eight presidents (Just consider the sheer jumps in technology and law enforcement from Presidents Hoover through Nixon!), ultimately, J. Edgar chooses not to go deep into Edgar's obviously haunted psyche, what drove him to such lengths, his obsession with using Hollywood and the G-Man image to project his will on the American public, or his thirst for power.  How much of his actions are self-loathing?  How did Edgar personally reconcile his own hypocrisy with his pursuit of hypocritical public figures?  Did religion play a part at all in his inner-life?  Early on, Director Stone informs Edgar that his colleagues call him Speedy behind his back.  He chooses the name J. Edgar when asked to create a new account at a clothing store after meeting Clyde.  The name as title is an interesting one.  What was J. Edgar's reputation behind his back during those years of power?  How public was his homosexuality?  How did J. Edgar turn into the lampooned caricature well-known to most Americans?  What was going on with his father's mental illness?  These questions are exciting ones for me, but the the roving pack of writers helping tell the story and the ultimate exposure of Edgar as an unreliable narrator address these ideas remotely and obliquely, and never in a satisfying or thoughtful way.  Edgar's racism lies similarly unexplored during an especially virulent attack on Martin Luther King, Jr. on the eve of his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance.

I guess I am confused because Clint Eastwood has made some of the most acclaimed films of the past twenty years: Unforgiven, A Perfect World, Million Dollar Baby, Gran Torino.  He built a story around one of the finest actors of our time in DiCaprio, and he employed a top screenplay from acclaimed Milk writer Dustin Lance Black.  His film ultimately registers alongside Public Enemies, Michael Mann's misfire from a few summer's ago: a promising film of the 1920's-1930's with a star performance of an American icon which loses its focus as it goes on for far too long.  That is not to say that there is not a great movie in here somewhere.  J. Edgar Hoover remains a captivating 20th Century figure, a contradictory tragic hero, one seemingly shaped by Bolshevik attacks on American soil which infused his paranoia and obsession.  I think that J. Edgar Hoover deserves a more thoughtful film with a better script.  And none of the cast benefits from the pounds of garish make-up that they wear for more than half the film.  I wonder if it would have been better to cast older actors and actresses instead of piling on the receding hairlines, the liver spots, the paunch, and the neck wrinkles to stars DiCaprio, Watts, and Hammer?  If your movie is going to require more than half of its running time with your stars hidden under latex and make-up, when does that decision ultimately hamper a younger actor or actress?  I like all three performances, and I wonder why DiCaprio was not nominated for Best Actor.  I just simply might not be a great performance from him.  I wonder how it stacks up against Meryl Streep's Oscar-winning performance as Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady.  A disappointing misfire.