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It is a typical image in the films of Clinton Eastwood, Jr., actor-director: one man facing a ring of guns trained on him, and through skill and sheer force of will (and quick editing) taking down their ranks until he is the last man standing. It is The Big Joke in the Sergio Leone horse operas* and the tradition continued when Eastwood or others held the directorial reins. In Joe Kidd, Eastwood drives a train through a building to get "the drop" on a bunch of targets. Don Siegel put a more realistic spin on it in his first Dirty Harry movie, making it a faster-paced urban assault, kin to the big shoot-out of High Noon, and Eastwood showed how the psychological element did the trick in his Oscar-winning "Best Picture," Unforgiven. Gran Torino, which, at the time, Eastwood said was his final acting bow, ended the conceit, showing that the trick only works in the movies (but not that particular movie) turning that confrontation into a sacrifice for the greater good.
There's one thing about the Eastwood style—economy. He rarely exceeds his scheduled shooting days or his budget, frequently saving his investors money. His crew is usually the same, although, typically, he has survived many of his frequent collaborators like the Surtees family of cinematographers, composer Jerry Fielding and his long-time production designer Henry Bumstead. His early films are full of flashy zooms, rack-focus tricks and other director star-turns, but he's lost those. In style, he became more like Don Siegel than Sergio Leone, with just a hint of Samuel Fuller—just cantankerous enough to irk people. But, on-set he's prepared, quiet, rarely directing his actors but collaborating with them, and rather than shouting a blustery "Action!" to start filming, he'll merely say "When you're ready." He's beloved by actors and he's worked with a lot of the best, winning them frequent awards, young and old. He is a throw-back to the business days of film-making, when art would come from challenges, rather than unlimited budgets full of waste. And with no intention of quitting making films, he's still standing, the last of his breed.
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Almost as a good luck talisman, Eastwood used his friend and director Don Siegel in his first movie. |
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It's a revenge story, with just a shade of the spooky, as it's indicated The Stranger is the vengeful spirit of one of the town's lynching victims. The author was Ernest Tidyman, who was a "hot" screenwriter at the time having written both Shaft and the Academy Award-winning The French Connection.
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The exquisite poster—also somewhat tongue in cheek—was painted by fantasy artist Frank Frazetta.****
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So...why did they call it The Gauntlet? |
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Okay. Now, stop and think about that for a moment. "...that are thought in Russian." Any specific accent? Nyet, not too convincing, but Clint learned about computer guided motion-control FX and managed to bring the film in under budget, tricky to do with special effects.
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Next Time: Clint Eastwood, Part 2-"Actor/Director" to "Director/Actor"
* That scene is, as a lot of the film, a direct steal from Kurosawa's Yojimbo.
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** Universal tries to make some hay from a film it had no confidence in, by putting Eastwood's face prominently in the poster, although Eastwood is only seen (barely) as an extra.
*** "Trevanian" was the pen-name of communications professor Dr. Rod Whitaker, who wrote an eclectic series of novels, ranging from spy spoofs to historical fiction between 1973 and his death in 2005. "The Eiger Sanction" and "The Loo Sanction" were Trevanian's first books, featuring an art professor who moonlights as a government assassin, Dr. Jonathon Hemlock. In the "Eiger" book he is recruited by the CII and its monstrous albino overseer to eliminate a climber on a planned assault of the Eiger in the Swiss Alps. By turns whimsical and hard-boiled, the book was a best-seller. But the movie version was dismissed by the author as "vapid."
**** Glenn Kenny sees it more as Eastwood's Frank Capra movie, especially It Happened One Night. Wouldn't argue with that.
***** Here's the Frazetta artwork in all its garish glory.
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