Clint Eastwood: Hollywood’s Loner
written by Michael Munn is a book which I remember buying from new. The author was
a familiar name due to his regular columns and stories within UK Film magazines
such as Photoplay and Film Review. This is quite an easy and enjoyable read. Thompson also had the advantage of
interviewing several of Eastwood’s co-stars including Lee Van Cleef, Lee
Marvin, Ingrid Pitt, Kay Lenz, Donald Sutherland and Tyne Daly. It is illustrated
with two sections of b/w stills. The reproduction of the stills are good and on
glossy paper. The book is the regular sized hardback format measuring approx. 15.5
x 23.8 cm and consists of 257 pages. It was first published in England by Robson
books; 1st Edition UK edition February, 1992 and covers Clint’s career up
through to The Rookie. There are some nice photos used in this book, including a
very rarely seen shot from the final fight scene in Play Misty for Me. The
front cover (for this 1st edition) features a candid photo of Clint while
the back cover features a very nice colour publicity shot of Clint and Jean
Seberg from Paint Your Wagon. As for the availability of this book, it varies a
great deal. I have seen used copies on Amazon starting from £25.00 and new
copies range from £110.00 to a staggering £399.00!!! The book does show up occasionally on Ebay (mostly Pre-owned)
and usually with a buy now or starting price of approx. £5.00. The original
cover price on the first published edition was £16.95.
Friday, 16 February 2018
Collecting Clint in print # 10 Clint Eastwood: Sexual Cowboy (English)
Clint Eastwood: Sexual Cowboy written
by Douglas Thompson is a book which I remember buying from new. The author was
a familiar name due to his regular stories found within The Sunday Express, The
Daily Express and The Mail on Sunday newspapers. As I remember, this is quite
an easy and enjoyable read. Thompson also
had the advantage of interviewing Eastwood on a number of occasions. It is illustrated
with two sections of b/w stills. The reproduction of the stills are good and on
glossy paper. The book is the regular sized hardback format measuring approx. 15.5
x 23.8 cm and consists of 216 pages. It was first published in England by Smith
Gryphon; 1st Edition UK edition Sept. 1992 and covers Clint’s career up through
to The Unforgiven (as the book refers to it). Actually the book also refers to
Unforgiven’s original script title as The Cut-Whore Killings rather than The
William Munny Killings. There are some nice photos used in this book, including
that great shot of Clint with Jo Ann Harris at a screening for The Beguiled. The front cover (for this 1st
edition) features a photo of Clint from a session which saw the same image
appear on a great deal of magazine publications in the Eighties. However, the
paperback edition (below) came with a different cover photo, an even earlier picture dating from
around 1976-77. As for the availability of this book, there really shouldn’t be
too much of a problem. I have seen used copies (both hardback and softback
editions) on Amazon starting as low as 1p. It also shows up regularly on Ebay
(mostly Pre-owned) and usually with a buy now price ranging from £2.50 - £15.00
for the Hardback edition. The original cover price on the first published
edition was £15.99.
Collecting Clint in print # 9 Clint Eastwood: A Biography (English)
Clint Eastwood: A Biography written
by Minty Clinch is a book which I remember buying from new and thinking for
years the author’s name must had been some kind of joke. Then I found out she
wrote for the Sunday Times and The Observer newspapers. As I remember, this is
quite an enjoyable read. It is illustrated
with two sections of b/w stills. The reproduction of the stills are good and on
glossy paper. The book is the regular sized hardback format measuring approx. 16.5
x 24.8 cm and consists of 248 pages. It was published in England by Hodder
& Stoughton Ltd; First Edition on 1st Sept. 1994 and covers Clint’s career
up through to A Perfect World. Most stills used are film based, but there are
some nice behind the scenes shots featuring Clint with Jean Seberg playing
pool, and a rarely seen photo of Alison and Kyle (with very long hair). The
front cover (for this 1st edition) features a photo of Clint and
looks to be from the Mayor of Carmel period. However, other re-prints do come
with a different cover photo. As for the availability of this book, there
really shouldn’t be too much of a problem. I have seen used copies (both
hardback and softback editions) on Amazon starting as low as 1p and new copies
at £49.99. It also shows up regularly on Ebay (mostly Pre-owned) and usually
with a £2-3 buy now price. The original cover price on the first published
edition was £15.99.
Collecting Clint in print # 8 Clint Eastwood: Film-Maker (English)
Clint Eastwood: Film-Maker written
by Daniel O’Brien is a book which is a very good read. I remember ordering this
from new and I wasn’t disappointed. It is not an entirely scholarly read, but
it is intelligently written. It is
generally well-illustrated throughout with b/w film stills. The reproductions
of the stills are also of a good quality. The book is a medium paperback format
measuring approx. 9.5” x 6.5” in size and consists of 208 pages. It was
published in England by BT Batsford Ltd publishing in 1996 and covers Clint’s
career up through to The Bridges of Madison County. Most stills used are of the
standard type, but there is a nice shot of Albert Popwell from Magnum Force in
the back of the taxi searching his working girl for hidden money. It’s a shot
which I can’t recall seeing anywhere else or as a press still – which means
there’s hope out there and it exists somewhere. Overall, I like this book a
great deal. As for the availability of this book, there really shouldn’t be too
much of a problem. I have seen used copies on Amazon starting as low as 1p and
new copies at £6.00. It also shows up regularly on Ebay (mostly used or as ex
library) and usually with a £2-3 buy now price. The original cover price on the
first published edition was £14.99.
Collecting Clint in print # 7 Clint Eastwood VIP Cinema – (German)
Clint Eastwood VIP Cinema – (German
text) written by Berndt Schulz is a book which is part of a series that also
featured Robert De Niro, Don Johnson and Nick Nolte. As I recall, I remember
picking up this book from a German seller at a film fair in London. It is
generally well-illustrated throughout in both colour and b/w. The reproductions
of stills are also of a good quality. The book is a large paperback format measuring
approx. 11.5” x 9.5” in size and consists of 80 pages. It was published in
Germany by VIP publishing in 1993 and covers Clint’s career up through to A
Perfect World. There are also some nice colour pictures covering the Oscars win
for Unforgiven, the film that is also used for illustrating the books front cover.
There is also a terrific colour shot of Clint taken on location from Magnum
Force, sitting on a chair at the shipyard. It’s a lovely shot which I can’t
recall seeing anywhere else. Overall, it’s a pretty nice publication. Availability
for this particular book is a little on the tough side, you don’t see too many
copies around these days especially on Amazon. However, it does show up
occasionally on Ebay (more often from Germany) and usually with a £5.00
starting price.
Thursday, 15 February 2018
Collecting Clint in print # 5 & 6 Clint Eastwood from Rawhide to Pale Rider – the man and his films (English translated edition)
Clint Eastwood from Rawhide to
Pale Rider – the man and his films (English translated edition) by François
Guérif is a book which originated from France. The book was translated into
English by Lisa Nesselson. I always liked this particular book as I remember it
the first to provide a full Rawhide episode guide and some nice French advertisements
for the Dollar films. Unfortunately, although generally well-illustrated
throughout, the reproduction of stills was not the best in quality.
The book is
a large paperback format measuring approx. 9.1” x 8.3” in size and consists of
200 pages. It was first published in the UK by Roger Houghton publishers in 1986
and carried the Pale Rider photograph cover (left).
There was also an American version (below) released in the same year and published by St. Martin’s Press / New York.
Whilst the content was identical the cover was considerably different with a
painting (which appears to be from Sudden Impact) by Marc Cozza. Overall, a pretty
enjoyable read. The book can still be found these days on both Ebay and Amazon,
and can be picked relatively cheaply dependant on condition.
David Frangioni’s Clint Eastwood: Icon Book Updated and Expanded Edition
On Tuesday I had the great
pleasure to receve a phone call from author David Frangioni. David’s original Clint
Eastwood Icon: The Essential Film Art Collection is regarded among fans as the definitive
authority in terms of Eastwood artwork books. What perhaps sets David aside
from other authors of Eastwood related publications is the fact that David is a
genuine fan and collector, and his passion is reflected on each of those
glorious pages. It was a couple of years ago now, when David entrusted me with
the news that he planned to update and expand his book and keep me informed of
its progress. Well, the good news is – that David’s book is now complete with
an expected street date of May-June 2018.
The updated book features a
wealth of additional content, this new edition of Clint Eastwood: Icon presents
an unprecedented collection of film art and rare material surrounding the
legendary actor as seen through the original iconic artwork. This comprehensive
trove gathers together poster art, lobby cards, standees, Italian Spaghetti
Western Premier Posters, studio ads, and esoteric film memorabilia from around
the world. From his early roles as the nameless gunslinger in Sergio Leone’s
spaghetti Westerns, to the vigilante films of the 1970s and 1980s, through his
directorial roles and latest releases, Clint Eastwood: Icon captures the
powerful presence that turned Eastwood into the definitive American hero.
I’m also very proud to announce
that The Clint Eastwood Archive will be working closely with David in promoting
this book. David will also be producing some exclusive video content for us as
well as promo videos and the latest up to the minute press releases. I can tell
you that some of the new content is incredible, as are the stories behind them.
All will of course be revealed within the pages. The book will be printed using
the best grade of paper in order to present the artwork in the best possible
quality. It should also be remembered that proceeds from the book will also
benefit charities.
It is very clear from our
conversation that David’s enthusiasm for this book is pretty unrivalled. I’ve
had the pleasure of talking to a great deal of authors who have written books
on Eastwood, and I’ve also helped contribute to some of those publications. However, David brings something unique - the
genuine fan element. It is something that transfers from the heart to the
printed page, and undoubtedly makes it something very special indeed.
Stay tuned for more information in the coming months.
Monday, 12 February 2018
Collecting Clint in print # 4 Clint Eastwood (J'ai lu cinéma. Les Grands acteurs) (French Edition)
Clint Eastwood (J'ai lu cinéma.
Les Grands acteurs) (French Edition) by Hélène Lagarde was yet another series
of books from France. The series also covered stars such as Steve McQueen, Marilyn
Monroe and director Alfred Hitchcock. Eastwood was the subject of book No 5 in
the series.
The book was a more conventional size paperback measuring approx. 7.1”
x 4.3” in size and consisted of 144 pages. It was published by Editions J'ai lu
books on September 20th 1988. Written in French text, there is a nice selection
of images printed on semi matt paper in b/w and colour.
It’s a rather nice book
actually; I only wish I could read it. It also contains a nice picture
featuring Clint, Don and Meg Myles during Coogan’s Bluff which I can’t remember ever
seeing as a still or in any other publication? I can’t recall where I purchased
this from. However, it can still be found these days on both Ebay and Amazon,
and is often on offer for between 1-6 euros.
Collecting Clint in print # 3 Clint Eastwood (Solar star) (French Edition)
Clint Eastwood (Solar star)
(French Edition) by Philippe J. P Ferrari was another series of books from
France. The series also covered stars such as Jane Fonda, Robert Redford and
John Wayne. The books did not carry a series number.
It was another smaller
format book approx. 7” x 5” in size and consisted of 68 pages. It was published
by Solar; Solarstar books in 1980. Written in French text, there is a nice
selection of images printed on matt paper in b/w and colour. It also contains
some full page colour poster art which are French versions.
This book was often advertised on the back
pages of magazines such as Film Review. It’s still quite collectable these days
and a few copies can sometimes be found on Amazon. But you would still be
expected to pay between $18-20 for a good used copy.
Sunday, 11 February 2018
Collecting Clint in print # 2 CLINT EASTWOOD. Le franc-tireur d'Hollywood (French)
Clint Eastwood Le franc-tireur d'Hollywood (French) by Eric Libiot was another series of books from France. The series also covered stars such as French Footballer Eric Cantona, Bob Marley and Steven Spielberg. Eastwood was the subject of No11 in the series. It was a small format book approx. 12.5 x 14.3 cm in size and consisted of 47 pages. It was published by Casterman books on January 23rd 1997. Written in French text, there is a nice selection of images printed on matt paper. It’s a quirky little book, which would probably appeal more to completists. In general, you don’t see this book about too much; however, copies can be picked up, and rather cheaply from outlets such as Amazon, France.
Clint Eastwood and the lost TV appearance
So here’s an interesting little story. About a month ago I had
to enter the dark domain known to millions as ‘the cupboard under the stairs’.
I took this dreaded journey as I knew I had a sealed up box which had my
Eastwood scripts inside.
Finally locating it, I was going through it and rediscovered
an original script which I had acquired from America well over 20 years ago. I
had forgotten all about it. However, what makes this rather unique is that it
is for a TV game show where Clint appeared as special guest star – nothing too exciting
in that I guess? But here’s the thing - no-one has this appearance recorded,
not even the big sites such as the IMDB!
So effectively it could easily be
considered as lost. Furthermore, it’s entirely possible that this script could
be the only existing evidence of Clint’s appearance? The show was ‘It could be
you’ (1956-1961) and was hosted by Bill Leyden, absolutely everything is in
this script, all of the original additions, the different coloured pages for
the advertisements, what was being advertised in the breaks, the word count,
duration, agency headed pages, it’s quite wonderful.
It was filmed (taped) on Stage 1, NBC Studios - 3000 W. Alameda
Avenue, Burbank, California on Tuesday, December 27th 1960 and aired
on Friday, December 30th 1960. The half hour program was filmed in
front of a live studio audience and had the contestants win prizes they had
always wanted but were unable to afford - usually by performing stunts.
The contestant on this particular episode (a Mrs Louise Bush)
was a big fan of Rawhide and Clint was introduced as the show’s special guest,
every part of Clint’s dialogue is scripted and he is invited to sing along to a
rendition of ‘Auld Lang Syne’ –
I don’t think I realised (at the time I obtained this piece)
what a rarity this would turn out to be? The internet was still very much in
its infancy at the time, so researching a show such as this was pretty much
impossible. But some 20-25 years on, and the fact that this appearance is still
unrecorded anywhere, does make me smile a little.
The Wiki entry for the show does state ‘Guest celebrities
would sometimes appear to aid the host. Among those that appeared on
the show were Lex Barker, Annette Funicello and Steve McQueen.
Thursday, 8 February 2018
Reviews: The 15:17 to Paris
Clint Eastwood's 'The 15:17 to Paris' never feels entirely
real by Owen Gleiberman, Variety February 7, 2018
Clint Eastwood’s “The 15:17 to Paris” is a fluky experiment
of a true-life thriller that sounds, at least on paper, like a metabolic piece
of Eastwood red meat. On August 21, 2015, a man named Ayoub El-Khazzani, armed
with an AK-47, a pistol, and a box cutter, opened fire on the passengers
traveling aboard a high-speed railway train from Amsterdam to Paris. The gunman
was probably an Islamic terrorist (though that has never been determined; he
claimed to be a burglar), and once his assault rifle jammed, he was overcome by
a trio of young American passengers, two of whom were enlisted men: Spencer
Stone, a 23-year-old Airman First Class; Alek Skarlatos, a 22-year-old Army
National Guard Specialist, on leave from his deployment in Afghanistan; and
their long-time buddy Anthony Sadler, a 23-year-old senior at California State
University.
Eastwood re-enacts the incident, shooting it in a
conventionally forceful and exciting hair-trigger hand-held moment-of-truth
style, breaking it into dramatic pieces and circling back to it throughout the
film. He also dramatizes the three young men’s lives leading up to the
incident. He goes back to their delinquent boyhood in Sacramento, and then
follows them through military training and, finally, the impromptu vacation in
Europe that led the three of them — by chance? Or was it fate to board that train?
The highly unusual premise of “The 15:17 to Paris” is that
Stone, Skarlatos, and Sadler all portray themselves. None are professional
actors, but they’re heroes playing heroes, and that means that they’ve got a
bit of inside expertise. It also means — theoretically — that the movie will
bring the bravery of their actions close to the audience with a rare
existential authenticity: the feeling that this is how it looked, this is how
it felt, and this is how it went down.
The reason that’s very Clint Eastwood, even though you can
imagine filmmakers from Edward Zwick to Richard Linklater coming up with the
same concept, is that Eastwood has always had a unique investment in the gritty
conviction of the men of action he portrays, as both actor and director. Dirty
Harry wasn’t just a scowling cop badass in an underworld thriller; he was a guy
who did what had to be done. (He was, in essence, a political character: a
right-wing urban warrior with an agenda expressed through his Magnum.)
Eastwood’s Western heroes, in films from “The Outlaw Josey Wales” to
“Unforgiven,” scowl at the world with the moral weight of their mission. And in
his more recent work, from the down-in-the-muck, rabble-rousing “American
Sniper” to the high-minded, anti-bureaucratic “Sully,” Eastwood has doffed his
cap to true-life manly men whose split-second willingness to act makes the
difference between courage and doubt, victory and defeat. Eastwood isn’t just
making “action films.” He’s keeping alive the dream of what it means to take
action.
If you go into “The 15:17 to Paris” with no idea that you’re
watching three young men play themselves, re-enacting the moment of their own
valor (and let’s be clear: However much the film is advertised, plenty of
people — probably most — will go in having no idea), you’ll see a docudrama
that looks convincing enough, with three performers who sort of resemble movie
stars (they’re tall and handsome, with a natural-born cock-of-the-walk ‘tude),
but who all seem a bit unsure in their roles, which is a little ironic.
As the movie opens, in 2005, Spencer and Alek are getting
ready to graduate from grade school, and their single moms, played by Judy
Greer and Jenna Fischer, go in to have a conference with the boys’ teacher, who
informs them that both kids have ADD. She tells them in such a brusque didactic
manner (“If you don’t medicate them now, they’ll just self-medicate later!”) that
you’re already wishing the movie would stop, reset, and begin with a better
screenplay. (This one is by Dorothy Blyskal; it’s her first.) Going forward,
not every scene is as in-your-face awkward, but there’s a stiff-jointedness to
the repartee, and that’s the last kind of script these novice actors needed.
Eastwood would have been wise to let them improvise — to draw on their
personalities more, revealing things a conventional movie wouldn’t. Instead,
they’re playing cut-and-dried versions of their own selves.
Let’s assume, though, that you go in knowing what the deal
is. It doesn’t take long to grow accustomed to Stone, Skarlatos, and Sadler’s
casual semi-non-acting, because they’re appealing dudes, quick and smart and
easy on the eyes. The oddity of the movie — and this is baked into the way
Eastwood conceived it, sticking to the facts and not over-hyping anything — is
that this vision of real-life heroism is so much less charged than the
Hollywood version might be that it often feels as if a dramatic spark plug is
missing. I’ve long argued for authenticity in movies (especially when they’re
based on true stories), but “The 15:17 to Paris” presents a kind of
walking-selfie imitation of authenticity. The movie creates its own version of
the uncanny valley.
Spencer Stone is the central character. He’s the one who
leads the charge on the train and gets the lion’s share of screen time leading
up to it. Yet to our surprise, he’s the protagonist as genial borderline
screw-up. The childhood scenes, in which the three boys bond over war games,
basketball, and daily trips to the principal’s office of their Christian high
school, are functional in an Afterschool Special way, but then we find Spencer,
after graduation, as a doughy slacker working at a Jamba Juice. A customer
inspires him to join the Air Force, and there’s a training montage in which he
loses the pot belly and seems to find a purpose. Yet he finds neither fulfilment
nor success.
Stone, big and pale, slightly gawky in his crewcut, comes
off as a good guy who’s still something of an overgrown kid, and he reminds you
of certain actors. He’s like the young Woody Harrelson, or a more genial
Michael Rappaport. But there are not a lot of layers to what he shows us. He
goes through the motions of trying out for (and failing) several military
positions, until he seems to find his calling in a wrestling match. But it’s
all served up with too much this-happened-and-then-this-happened neutrality for
us to have a lot of reaction to.
Anthony Sadler, Spencer’s good buddy, is the most
charismatic of the three — he acts with a sly smile that suggests that he, at
least, has things on his mind apart from what’s happening at any given moment.
Alek Skarlatos is the one we feel we know least. He looks like a male model, and
is smiley to a fault, but he always seems like a sidekick. After Spencer’s
military adventures, and a pit stop in Afghanistan (Sadler doesn’t get as much
backstory, the unfortunate implication being that the fact that he’s not a
military man means he doesn’t merit it), the movie unites the three old friends
for a backpacking tour of Europe. Once again, there’s no overhyping of
adventure. Stone and Sadler arrive in Venice wearing their bro ignorance on
their sleeves. In Amsterdam, the three have a wild time on the Euro disco
floor, but in the end it’s a chaste evening. And then they head to Paris.
Spencer has already regaled with Sadler with a speech about
how he feels his life building toward something. It’s a pinch of fortune-cookie
mysticism sprinkled over what was basically a random horrific event. But aboard
that train, there’s nothing random about how Spencer Stone takes charge: Once
the killer (played by Ray Corasani) starts rampaging through the cars, Spencer
acts with shocking selflessness and courage; if that assault rifle hadn’t
jammed, he’d be dead. His wrestling training comes in handy, and the other two
men assist with punches and rifle-butt bashes to the face. Spencer also draws
on his paramedic training to save the life of a passenger who gets shot through
the neck.
It’s all startlingly matter-of-fact. For a few minutes, the
film rivets our attention. Yet I can’t say that it’s transporting, or highly
moving, or — given the casting — revelatory. There’s an obvious precursor to
“The 15:17 to Paris,” and that’s “United 93,” which I have never hesitated to
call the one great post-9/11 drama. It, too, stayed as true as possible to the
most minute facts — and it also featured a number of non-actors (albeit in
small roles, in the control tower) who’d actually lived through what they were
depicting. Yet the brilliance of “United 93” is that its director, Paul
Greengrass, took what happened that day — even from the point of view of the
terrorists — and made each action feel joined to every other action. He created
a unified-field thriller. Eastwood, in “The 15:17 to Paris,” does the opposite.
The film keeps telling us that what happened aboard that train was the fulfilment
of something, but neither the event nor the three actors re-enacting it seem
completely real. They seem like pieces of reality trapped in a movie.
Clint
Eastwood derails a tale of real-life terror
Peter
Bradshaw's film of the week, The Guardian, Thursday 8 Feb 2018
Three young Americans who bravely
foiled an attack on a train play themselves in a drama that focuses too much on
their excruciatingly dull backstories.
The authentic courage of three
American heroes who foiled a terrorist attack has been anti-alchemised by Clint
Eastwood into a strangely boring, dramatically inert film in which the main
characters remain as opaque and unreadable as sphinxes to the very last.
But there is some interest in
this film nonetheless because of the experimental chutzpah Eastwood has showed
in using – not Chris Hemsworth, not Bradley Cooper, not Trevante Rhodes – but
the three actual guys stolidly playing themselves. (The attacker, one Ayoub
El-Khazzani, being now incarcerated, was not available for filming.) The
resulting film looks bizarrely like an essay in take-it-or-leave-it social
realist grit or radical, non-professional clunkiness, as if before filming Clint
watched Ken Loach’s I, Daniel Blake and Tommy Wiseau’s The Room and couldn’t decide
which one he liked more.
The men themselves were Spencer
Stone, Alek Skarlatos and Anthony Sadler; two were from the US military,
trained in combat and first aid, and at least one had a strong Christian faith.
While backpacking in 2015 the three tackled a heavily armed jihadi terrorist on
a train from Amsterdam to Paris – saving dozens of lives. There also happened
to be a British guy there whose contribution, following the tradition of
Hollywood war movies, has been pretty much cheerfully ignored.
The effect of realness in this
film is a strange one. The three are bad at acting, of course, but not as bad
as all that, and a basic level of woodenness is important for underscoring the
film’s genuine quality, because how disconcerting would it be if they all
turned out to be talented thespians, a trio of Benedict Cumberbatches? The
movie starts with the tense initial situation aboard the train and then –
exasperatingly – keeps cutting back to the three men’s dull and diffidently
directed backstories, their unhappy and unsatisfactory childhoods, their early
lives in the forces, and then their quite excruciatingly boring backpacking
holiday, which we all have to live through in real time before they climb
aboard the 15:17 to Paris and we reach the main event.
Except that, weirdly, the attack
is not the main event. That comes one step later when Eastwood, with almost
avant garde cheek, uses actual footage of French President François Hollande
presenting the three men with the Légion d’honneur and we seamlessly cut away
to the actors playing their adoring mothers and relatives. Even here, though,
he can’t resist slathering syrupy music on the soundtrack to make sure we
realise that it’s an emotional moment.
The attack itself is robustly and
forthrightly shot, without the nerve-twisting horror of Paul Greengrass’s 9/11
movie United 93, it is true, but that was a different situation. It is all over
pretty quickly. It seems almost anticlimactic and detached. Perhaps that is
faithful to the experience itself.
But, intentionally or not, the
real meat of the film is that mind-bendingly boring holiday: endless beers,
endless coffees, endless selfies. No tension between the guys. No real
connection either. They look as if they don’t know each other all that well.
But then again, that is probably what real friends actually look like, without
artificially scripted filmic moments to denote friendship. Eastwood and his
screenwriter Dorothy Blyskal, who has adapted the three men’s book about the
event, have rigorously avoided any premonitions or creepy omens, although
Spencer talks about God having a purpose to his life. No, we just trudge
through the vacation, like being forced to look at someone else’s photos.
It is dull. But perhaps that’s
what life is – dull. Especially compared to a sudden burst of frenetic, heroic
activity on a train when you’re faced with a theocratic murderer and your
training kicks in.
As for Stone, Skarlatos and
Sadler, my admiration for them knows no bounds. But their real presence in the
film? It reminded of the Player in Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
Are Dead who said he once hanged someone for real on stage and a baffled
audience just took it for bad acting. A documentary by Eastwood might have
served everyone better. But François Hollande might be in line for a special
reality Oscar for that climactic movie speech he didn’t realise he was giving.
The 15:17 to Paris, www.rogerebert.com, Matt Zoller Seitz, February 8, 2018
On August 21, 2015, three
Americans traveling through Europe subdued a terrorist who tried to kill
passengers on the Thalys train #9364 bound for Paris. The men were Airman First
Class Spencer Stone, Oregon National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos, and college
student Anthony Sadler. They'd been friends since childhood. The gunman, a
Morrocan named Ayoub El Khazzani, exited a washroom strapped with weapons,
wrestled with a couple of would-be heroes, and shot one of them in the neck
with a pistol. Stone tackled Khazzani and locked him in a choke hold while
being repeatedly sliced with a knife. Stone's two friends plus Chris Norman, a
62-year-old British businessman living in France, hit Khazzani with their fists
and with the butts of firearms that he'd dropped into the struggle until he
finally lost consciousness. Then they kept the shooting victim alive until the
train was able to stop and let police and emergency medical technicians
onboard. For their bravery, Norman, Sadler, Skarlatos, and Stone were made
Knights of the Legion of Honour by French president François Hollande, and
given awards, parades, and talk show appearances back home.
As Hollywood film fodder, this
is—or should have been—a slam dunk, even for a director who insisted on having
the three Americans play themselves, which is the case here. To call Clint
Eastwood's "The 15:17 to Paris" a mixed bag would be generous. It
packs all the wild action you came to see into a 20-minute stretch near the
end, and elsewhere gives us something like a platonic buddy version of Richard
Linklater's "Before" trilogy. This is an audacious choice regardless
of whether you're into it.
Too bad seeing this trio re-enact
their European vacation is as absorbing as watching a friend's video footage of
a trip you didn't go on. As cinematographer Tom Stern's camera hangs
close-but-not-too-close, Sadler, Stone and Skarlatos retrace their steps,
traveling from Rome and Venice to Berlin and Amsterdam, cracking jokes about
old buildings and sculptures, flirting with attractive women, getting liquored
up in a nightclub. You feel like you're right there alongside them. This is an
eerie and astonishing feeling when they're re-enacting the train incident, but
not when they're ordering food or taking selfies.
There's a long tradition of real
people starring in films about their lives, from Pancho Villa and Jackie
Robinson to Muhammad Ali and Howard Stern, and some film cultures, particularly
Italy's Neorealism and Iran's post-1980s docudramas, have a proud history of
extraordinary nonprofessional performances. World War II Medal of Honor winner
Audie Murphy went straight into acting with help from a famous admirer, James
Cagney, played himself in 1955's "To Hell and Back," based on his
same-titled memoir, and died 21 years later with 50 screen credits. There
haven't been too many instances where audiences looked at these performances
and thought, "Wow, what an incredible actor—a professional wouldn't have
added anything." But if the nonprofessional seems relatively comfortable
onscreen and lets a bit of personality come through, the film can work. And the
performance might be likable. Or at least not painful.
I'm relieved to report that not
only are these three less than terrible in their big screen debuts, they're
kind of charming, once you decide to make peace with the fact that Eastwood has
traded the depth and nuance that a professional can bring for the unpredictable
freshness you can only get from casting newcomers. Stone is an unexpectedly
striking screen presence: a towering, broad-shouldered, lethal goofball with a
comic book henchman's jawline and a bubbly, impatient manner of speaking. There
are moments when his rat-a-tat delivery, practically tripping over his own
words, suggests an unholy fusion of Drew Carey and young Gary Busey. I wouldn't
be surprised to see him wind up on a sitcom opposite Tim Allen or Kevin James.
The other two seem to have been granted screen time in proportion to their not-terribleness.
We get a lot of Stone with Sadler, who's not a particularly deep actor, to put
it mildly, but is disarmingly natural and has a great rapport with his pal.
Skarlatos, a handsome but wooden nice guy, is kept mostly offscreen until he
joins the others.
But no matter what you think of
these men as thespians, their performances are the least of the film's
problems. A good 70% of "The 15:17 to Paris" is inert, its affable
nothingness redeemed only by the laid-back charisma of three men who once again
find themselves in extraordinary circumstances and have no choice but to rise
to the occasion.
The film starts with a flashback
to the trio's childhood, with Jenna Fischer and Judy Greer as Skarlatos and
Stone's mothers, that promises an American Fighting Man Epic in the vein of
"Sergeant York" or "Hacksaw Ridge." But these scenes fall
almost entirely flat, with character traits being more described than
dramatized. The scene where the moms argue with a snotty administrator who
tries to diagnose Stone with ADHD while dissing both women for being single
mothers might be the worst five minutes Eastwood has put onscreen, but it has
lots of competition here. How Eastwood managed to get worse performances out of
the professional actors playing the young heroes than the adults who'd never
acted is a mystery that only another director can properly unravel. Ace
character actors Tony Hale and Thomas Lennon are wasted as, respectively, the
school's principal and gym coach. Jaleel White is given just one scene to
convince us that he's a great teacher who inspired the boys' interest in
history; it lasts about 60 seconds and ends with him handing them a manila
folder full of maps. The moms mention God occasionally, but usually in a stilted
way, and their families' spiritual lives aren't examined in any detail (though
there are a couple of prayers in the film, which is rare for a Hollywood
movie).
The screenplay, adapted by
Dorothy Blyskal from a book co-written by the trio plus Jeffrey E. Stern, is
often painfully awkward and obvious. Earnest discussions of fate and destiny
are shoehorned into shallow but generally likeable (and seemingly improvised)
scenes of the guys talking to each other, and to people they meet during their
journey. A couple of the latter are so odd that they verge on sublime, like the
bit when an old man at a bar talks them into going to Amsterdam by recounting
the illicit good time he just had there.
But for the most part, "The
15:17 to Paris" is a study in misplaced priorities. While the re-enactment
of the incident on the train is superb—Eastwood has always had a flair for
staging unfussy yet shockingly brutal screen violence—I'd have happily traded
the lead-up hour of marshmallow fluffery for scenes that showed what happened
to the guys once they got back to their home country and were treated like gods
on earth (though, in fairness, Eastwood might've figured he told that story
already in “Flags of Our Fathers”). And there are some groaner choices, like
Eastwood's refusal to age Fischer and Greer for their scenes opposite their
now-grownup sons, which makes it seem as if they had them when they were 12;
the near-omission of Sadler's parents from the narrative, which inadvertently
turns a co-equal lead character into The Black Friend; and the way Eastwood
keeps the terrorist literally faceless during his first few flashback
appearances, by focusing on his hands, his feet, his knapsack and wheeled
suitcase, and the back of his neck.
I've read that Eastwood asked the
French government if he could get Khazzani to play himself, too, but was
refused. Is this why he portrayed him as a non-person—just another Bad Thing
happening to Good People?
I wanted to know how Khazzani ended up on that train
as well—not because he deserves any sympathy (he doesn't) but because his is
also a tale of social conditioning and sheer willpower, and might have
reflected off the main trio's story in
illuminating ways. For an example of how to do this in a thoughtful,
responsible manner, see Anurag Kashyap's 2007 film "Black Friday,"
which retold the same bombing from the point-of-view of the terrorists and the
police, in two different halves. Eastwood did something similar with
"Flags of Our Fathers" and "Letters from Iwo Jima." But for
the most part, he has become increasingly uninterested in that kind of
complexity, despite having devoted the first 20-plus years of his directing
career to letting us see the evil in good people, and the good in the evil.
While there's something innately
inspiring about Eastwood continuing to crank out films 48 years into his
directing career, there's a downside: his batting average has never been
terrific, and his game has slipped a lot since the Iwo Jima films. There are
intriguing aspects to nearly all of his films, but he's only made maybe six or
seven that are excellent from start to finish—even the mostly good ones have
bad scenes and sections—and in the last 20 years, even his good work has
included a lot of ill-considered, amateurish, or flat-out baffling elements,
like the screechingly caricatured parents in "Million Dollar Baby,"
and Chris Kyle doting on an obviously fake infant in "American
Sniper." Eastwood is famous for working fast and bringing his movies in on
time and under budget, and "The 15:17 to Paris" is another example of
that legendary efficiency: supposedly he decided to tell the trio's story after
giving them a Spike TV Guys' Choice Award just 19 months ago. But breeziness is
not, in itself, an unassailable virtue. There hasn't been a single Eastwood
film since "Unforgiven" that couldn't have benefited from script
rewrites, plus a few trusted advisors with the nerve to tell him that a
particular choice was ill-advised. (I know, I know—who wants to tell Clint
Eastwood he's wrong? Nobody who's seen him use a hickory stick in "Pale
Rider," for starters.)
The movie's greatest virtue,
which might be enough to make it a critic-proof hit no matter what, is its
poker faced sincerity. This extends to faithfully reproducing a Red State
worldview that was also showcased in "American Sniper" and
"Sully." A lot of U.S. moviegoers are going to feel seen by this
film, and that's a net gain for American cinema, which is supposed to be a
populist art form representing the body politic as it is, not merely as the
industry wishes it could be. If only someone could've heroically intervened to
save this movie.
Clint Eastwood's dramatic re-creation stalls at the station by
Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune, February 8th 2018
An oddly misguided act of generosity, director Clint
Eastwood’s “The 15:17 to Paris” may be the first film from Eastwood that lacks
a storytelling compass and a baseline sense of direction.
The docudrama follows a screenplay by first-timer Dorothy
Blyskal, taken in turn from the nonfiction account (written with Jeffrey E.
Stern) by the three young Americans, friends since childhood, who thwarted a
2015 terrorist attack on an Amsterdam train bound for Paris.
Their story, and Eastwood’s 36th film behind the camera,
builds on the foundation of their quick, decisive, successful act of courage.
They saved lives and did a great deal to bolster the image of Americans abroad,
at a time when films such as Eastwood’s own “American Sniper” exported a
divisive but extraordinarily profitable image of another, steelier kind.
So why does the movie come to so little?
Facts first. In 2015, Spencer Stone was an Air Force airman.
He and Anthony Sadler, an old pal from Sacramento, Calif., studying for a
degree in kinesiology, met up in Amsterdam with Alek Skarlatos, an Oregon
National Guard specialist back from a tour in Afghanistan.
On board a train to Paris, they encountered a lone
terrorist, Ayoub El Khazzani, an apparent ISIS loyalist armed with an assault rifle,
among other weapons, and 300 rounds of ammunition. We see fragments of the
run-up to the aborted attack at the film’s start and, here and there,
throughout “The 15:17 to Paris.” Dutifully, and photographed for maximum
audience satisfaction at seeing the bad guy get his, Eastwood saves the
sequence in full for its proper place in the climax.
Just three weeks before filming commenced, Eastwood decided
to cast the real men as themselves, with various, smaller real-life survivors
and bystanders as themselves. They’re surrounded and supported by well-known
actors, as well as by unknowns playing the Christian middle-school-age Stone,
Sadler and Skarlatos. Judy Greer and Jenna Fischer, doing all they can with
barely characterized roles, portray the mothers of Stone and Skarlatos,
respectively. In their very different skill sets, these actresses seek the same
results as their non-actor colleagues: as much simplicity and honesty as
possible. At its best, that’s Eastwood’s style.
But he’s working with a script that barely functions. The
film wobbles between flashbacks and flash-forwards, and has no interest in
giving us a sense of what they guys were, and are, really like, or how they
click together as friends. It can't be easy to play yourself in a movie. The
performances this movie rests on feel tentative, hesitant, slightly sheepish.
The script doesn’t help. Far too much of “15:17 to Paris” is
taken up with travelogue scenes of the young men touring Venice, or Rome, or
hitting the dance floor in Amsterdam. Eastwood lingers over one drab expository
or atmospheric nothing after another (“Wow, look at that view!”; “We gotta get
some gelato”). The key foreshadowing, played up in the trailers, arrives when a
reflective Stone says: “Ever feel like life is just pushing us toward
something, some greater purpose?” That’s a key moment, and he really did say
it. Yet on screen, it comes off as ginned-up and more than a little canned.
Many will disagree, and already have. This is hardly the
first American movie to cast a true-life dramatic reconstruction with the real
people as themselves: To varying degrees of success, we’ve had everything from
Audie Murphy in “To Hell and Back” to Howard Stern in “Private Parts.” But when
Eastwood’s film is over, you may think back to an earlier Eastwood film, “Flags
of Our Fathers.” That multi-strand WWII picture dealt in part with the way
real-life heroics become fodder for publicity, and how the complicated feelings
of the men involved take a back seat to the larger cause. It’s the last thing
he wanted, I’m sure, but Eastwood’s latest ends up feeling like a stunt.
We love stories of real-life heroics and grace under lethal
pressure. But we need them to be more than the sum of their stirring
intentions.
In ‘The 15:17 to Paris,’ Real Heroes Portray Their Heroism, by
A.O. Scottfeb. The New York Times, February 7th, 2018
On Aug. 21, 2015, Ayoub El Khazzani boarded a high-speed
train en route to Paris, armed with a knife, a pistol, an assault rifle and
nearly 300 rounds of ammunition. His attack, apparently inspired by ISIS, was
thwarted by the bravery and quick thinking of several passengers, notably three
young American tourists: Alek Skarlatos, Anthony Sadler and Spencer Stone.
Their heroism is at the center of Clint Eastwood’s new
movie, “The 15:17 to Paris,” a dramatic reconstruction as unassuming and
effective as the action it depicts. Based on a book written (along with Jeffrey
E. Stern) by Mr. Sadler, Mr. Skarlatos and Mr. Stone, the film stars them, too.
The practice of casting nonprofessionals in stories that
closely mirror their own experiences has a long history — it’s a staple of
Italian neorealism, the films of Robert Bresson and the Iranian cinema of the
1990s — but it remains a rarity in Hollywood. Usually the most we can expect is
a poignant end-credits glimpse of the real people our favorite movie stars have
pretended to be for the previous two hours. After all, part of the appeal of
movies “inspired by true events” is the chance to admire the artistry of actors
(like Tom Hanks’s, say, in Mr. Eastwood’s “Sully”) as they communicate the grit
and gumption of ordinary Americans in tough circumstances.
But the thing to admire about “The 15:17 to Paris” is
precisely its artlessness. Mr. Eastwood, who has long favored a lean,
functional directing style, practices an economy here that makes some of his
earlier movies look positively baroque. He almost seems to be testing the
limits of minimalism, seeing how much artifice he can strip away and still
achieve some kind of dramatic impact. There is not a lot of suspense, and not
much psychological exploration, either. A certain blunt power is guaranteed by
the facts of the story, and Mr. Eastwood doesn’t obviously try for anything
more than that. But his workmanlike absorption in the task at hand is precisely
what makes this movie fascinating as well as moving. Its radical plainness is
tinged with mystery.
Who exactly are these guys? They first met as boys in
Sacramento, which is where we meet them, played by Cole Eichenberger (Spencer
Stone), Paul-Mikel Williams (Anthony Sadler) and Bryce Gheisar (Alek
Skarlatos). Alek and Spencer, whose mothers (Judy Greer and Jenna Fischer) are
friends, pull their sons out of public school and enroll them in a Christian
academy, where they meet Anthony, a regular visitor to the principal’s office.
Frustrated by the educational demands of both church and
state, the boys indulge in minor acts of rebellion: toilet-papering a
neighbor’s house, swearing in gym class, playing war in the woods. They are
separated when Alek moves to Oregon to live with his father and Anthony changes
schools, but the three stay in touch as Anthony attends college and Alek and
Spencer enlist in the military. Spencer, stationed in Portugal, meets up with
Anthony in Rome, and Alek, who is serving in Afghanistan, visits a girlfriend
in Germany before joining his pals in Berlin. They go clubbing in Amsterdam,
wake up hung over and, after some debate, head for Paris.
To call what happens before the confrontation with the
gunman a plot, in the conventional sense, does not seem quite accurate. Nor do
Spencer, Anthony and Alek seem quite like movie characters. But they aren’t
documentary subjects, either. Mr. Eastwood, famous for avoiding extensive
rehearsals and retakes, doesn’t demand too much acting. Throughout the film,
the principal performers behave with the mix of affability and reserve they
might display when meeting a group of people for the first time. They are
polite, direct and unfailingly good-natured, even when a given scene might call
for more emotional intensity. In a normal movie, they would be extras.
And on a normal day, they would have been — part of the mass
of tourists, commuters and other travelers taking a quick ride from one
European capital to another. At times, Spencer, the most restless of the three
and the one whose life choices receive the most attention, talks about the
feeling of being “catapulted” toward some obscure destiny. But “The 15:17 to
Paris” isn’t a meditation on fate any more than it is an exploration of the
politics of global terrorism. Rather, it is concerned with locating the precise
boundary between the banal and the extraordinary, between routine and violence,
between complacency and courage.
The personalities of the main characters remain opaque,
their inner lives the subject of speculation. You can wonder about the sorrow
in Alek’s eyes, about the hint of a temper underneath Spencer’s jovial energy,
about Anthony’s skeptical detachment. But at the end of the movie, you don’t
really know them all that well. (You barely know Chris, a British passenger who
helped subdue Mr. Khazzani, at all. He is seen but not named.)
Producing the illusion of intimacy is not among Mr.
Eastwood’s priorities. He has always been a natural existentialist, devoted to
the idea that meaning and character emerge through action. At the end of “The
15:17 to Paris,” a speech by former President François Hollande of France
provides a touch of eloquence and a welcome flood of feeling. But the mood of
the film is better captured by Mr. Skarlatos’s account of it, published in news
reports after the attack: “We chose to fight and got lucky and didn’t die.”
'The 15:17 to Paris' turns a headline grabbing true story
into a lackluster Hollywood movie, By Kenneth Turan, The Los Angeles Times,
February 8th, 2018
In 1921, Louis Sonney, having single-handedly captured
bandit Roy Gardner, "the most hunted man in Pacific Coast history," played
himself in a film called "Crime Doesn't Pay" and toured the nation
with it on the Pantages vaudeville circuit.
In 1955, Congressional Medal of Honor winner Audie Murphy,
America's most decorated World War II soldier, played himself in a Technicolor and
Cinemascope version of his wartime exploits, "To Hell and Back,"
which became a major hit.
Now, in 2018, Anthony Sadler, Alek Skarlatos and Spencer
Stone play themselves in director Clint Eastwood's "The 15:17 to
Paris," the once-again true story of how a trio of friends disarmed a
heavily armed terrorist intent on killing as many as possible of the 500-plus
passengers on a train speeding to Paris from Brussels.
As a democratic culture, Americans are understandably
attracted to the notion of everyday heroes, of brave warriors hidden in plain
sight, people ordinary on the surface but possessed of astonishing reserves of
courage that reveal themselves when emergency calls.
Eastwood dealt with a similar situation in 2016's
"Sully," starring Tom Hanks as the intrepid real-life commercial
airline pilot who made a successful emergency landing on the Hudson River in
the dead of winter, so he understands that these stories demand the
just-the-facts style of direction he's so good at providing.
But though the sequences of the actual heroism on the
Paris-bound train are fully as crisp and involving as you'd expect, the other
sections of the film, intent on demonstrating how undeniably everyday the three
participants were up to that crucial moment, fall regrettably flat.
All indications to the contrary, despite the attempts of
first-time screenwriter Dorothy Blyskal (working from a book Sadler, Skarlatos
and Stone wrote with Jeffrey E. Stern), there does not appear to be an
involving feature film in their story, undeniably heroic though it is.
The nearly 50 movies Murphy went on to make after "To
Hell and Back," notwithstanding, Eastwood took a risk in casting the real
protagonists in their own story.
Though none of the trio should give up their day jobs just
yet, it's not their lack of compelling charisma that is the picture's main
problem, but rather that the on-screen story has not come up with anything
compelling for them to do outside those few life-and-death minutes on the
train.
The film teases that attack from its opening frames of an
ominous looking man walking through the Brussels train station on the way to
boarding the 15:17, but soon flashes back to one of its major focuses, a bland
after-school special-style examination of the bond the men forged as
middle-school students in Sacramento circa 2005.
No one, to put it mildly, sees these kids as potential
heroes. Rambunctious but good-hearted, young Spencer (William Jennings) and
Alek (Bryce Gheisar) get sent to the principal's office a lot, much to despair
of their struggling single parent mothers, played by Judy Greer and Jenna
Fischer, who nevertheless have their backs.
At that office is where the boys meet young Anthony
(Paul-Mikél Williams), also a frequent subject of Christian school discipline.
The three become fast friends, sharing an interest in war and weaponry and
listening intently when a teacher, in one of the movie's numerous bits of foreshadowing,
talks of Franklin D. Roosevelt as someone who "did the right thing at the
right time to defuse critical situations."
As adults, the three go their separate ways and lead what
appear to be haphazard lives. Sadler enrolls at Cal State Sacramento and is not
heard from a lot, while Skarlatos is deployed by the Oregon National Guard to
what looks like a nondescript tour in Afghanistan.
Stone, seen reciting the Prayer of St. Francis, has a strong
sense of mission. That takes him to the Air Force, but he has a lot of false
starts there, which we see in uninvolving detail. Still, he continues to
stubbornly believe "life is just pushing us toward something, some greater
purpose."
The friends decide to reunite on a European vacation, but
before we get to the train trip that made them famous, we are shown a detailed
rundown of all the standard sights they took in — including the Trevi Fountain
and the Colosseum in Rome, the bars of Amsterdam, the canals of Venice, the
city's iconic Piazza San Marco and pricey Gritti Palace restaurant, to name
just a few.
While it is nice to have the regular-guydom of these men
highlighted, this marking-time itinerary tests the limit of how much the buying
of gelato and the taking of multiple selfies can involve us.
As noted, the disarming of the terrifying El Khazzani is
well presented in a "You Are There" way and gives us a real sense of
the kind of bravery involved. A single act of heroism can truly transform a
life, but that action does not necessarily make for a transformative motion
picture.
Eastwood on track with The 15:17 to Paris, by Alan Corr,
RTE, Friday, 9th February, 2018
Clint Eastwood's latest is a naturalistic, no frills
retelling of real life events which sees real life heroes playing themselves
There is something of Paul Greengrass’s United 93 in this
compact and faithful retelling of the dramatic events on board an intercity
train from Amsterdam to Paris in August 2015 when three young American men
foiled a terrorist attack on 500 passengers. However, unlike Greengrass's
unbearably tense 9/11 drama, the outcome here is a far happier one.
Clint Eastwood has taken the brave and novel approach of
casting the three heroes - Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler and Alek Skarlatos -
as themselves and it really pays off in what is a naturalistic real life story.
After the bravado Sully starring Tom Hanks, this tale of derring do seems the
obvious choice for Eastwood.
The veteran director scrolls back through the three
childhood friends’ upbringing - troublesome years in a faith school, a
childhood fascination with the military - to give the full story of how one act
came to define them all. However, by the time the boys decide to undertake that
American custom of a backpacking trip around Europe we may be running out of
story.
The imminently likeable and gentlemanly Stone is the leader
here and he has real screen presence as the recent army recruit who feels a
divine force coursing through him and who avers several times in the film's
short running time that life is somehow pushing him towards some great act. At
one point he murmurs without a trace of irony, "I just wanted to go to war
and save lives."
Eastwood weaves themes of faith, fate, and friendship and
while it has some of his usual gung-ho worship of the military (he’s as at home
in boot camp as he was in Heartbreak Ridge), nobody could begrudge his salute
to these real life heroes.
However, he is not beyond sending flag and country up. When
the three Californian amigos take a tour of Berlin and stand at the site of
Hitler’s bunker, they are taken aback to hear that he perished just feet below
them as the Russians closed in. "You Americans can’t take the credit every
time evil is defeated," their guide laughs.
When it arrives, the crucial train scene is handled with
Eastwood’s flair for directing action and violence. Given the deadly serious
events it portrays, this is an easy-going, feel good watch. Just like the train
they are about to board, these three men are all hurtling toward an incredible
date with destiny.
'The 15:17 to Paris' review: heroes' journey stalled by
dullness, by Ethan Sacks, NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, Thursday, February 8th, 2018
Call it a cinema veri-test.
By casting the actual American heroes who foiled a terrorist
attack to play themselves in “The 15:17 to Paris,” director Clint Eastwood
tapped into an unprecedented level of realism for a drama.
The three childhood friends — former U.S. Airforce Airman
First Class Spencer Stone, National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos and Anthony Sadler
— certainly deserve to be celebrated like movie stars for the bravery and
selflessness they exhibited when their European vacation was interrupted in
horrific fashion on Aug. 21, 2015.
That’s when Stone was injured tackling and disarming an
assault rifle-toting gunman before he could open fire on the terrified
passengers. And if that wasn’t dramatic enough, Stone ignored his own slash
wounds to administer life-saving medical aid to the lone passenger who was
shot. The climax of “The 15:17 to Paris” recreates the event in hyper-realistic
detail with the very people involved. Eastwood even got the gunshot victim who
nearly died, Mark Moogalian, to play himself.
The sequence is among the most exciting moments captured on
screen in recent memory. But that still leaves the vast majority of the film’s
94-minute run time to fill. And most of it sure feels like padding.
Screenwriter Dorothy Blyskal takes the story all the way
back to when the trio first met as middle school students, through their
respective starts in the military and into the first few stops of their
backpacking travels through Europe. For the most part it’s about as interesting
as watching strangers' home movies.
A sequence showing Skarlatos’ tour of duty in Afghanistan,
for example, involves a lost backpack that is eventually recovered without any
problem. Stone and Sadler meet a woman while touring Venice, they have lunch
together, and then she goes off on her way. Not exactly some of the most
exciting moments captured on screen in recent memory.
The three heroes may now be movie stars, but they’re not yet
actors. They were not helped by heavy-handed dialogue like, “Do you ever feel
like life is pushing us toward something, some greater purpose?”
Eastwood faced similar issues with his last film, “Sully,”
and he still hasn’t figured out how to take a relatively short dramatic event
and build a movie around it. It helped to have Tom Hanks in the cockpit.
This time around it’s all put on the broad shoulders of
Stone, Skarlatos and Sadler. And that’s a lot to ask, even of the type of guys
who fearlessly run toward danger.
The 15:17 To Paris reviews: Critics SLAM Clint Eastwood
movie - ‘Excruciatingly dull’, by Shaun Kitchener, The Express, Thursday
February 8th 2018
THE 15:17 TO PARIS has had very negative reviews from
critics ahead of its release tomorrow. The Clint Eastwood true-story movie,
which stars the real-life heroes it is about, has been called out for being
“dull” and a “right-wing wet dream”.
The film is about three American heroes who helped scupper a
terrorist attack on board a train, with the men playing themselves.
The Guardian gave only two stars, saying the focus on their
backstories is “excruciatingly” boring, and also slammed the “woodenness” of
the central performances.
Radio Times were also unimpressed, giving one star and
saying it “awkwardly pivots from religious fervour to testosterone-fuelled
military recruitment video to backpacking travelogue”
“Eastwood’s hardline Republican politics have been well
documented over the years, and his version of the heroes’ book of the same name
has the air of a right-wing wet dream,” they added.
Rolling Stone were slightly more positive, giving
two-and-a-half stars out of a possible four, but said: “Through no fault of
their own – hey, you try acting without training – these non-pros simply can't
bring the film to vivid life.
“They get scant help from first-time screenwriter Dorothy
Blyskal, who adapts the mens' published account of their experience in The
15:17 to Paris: The True Story of a Terrorist, a Train and Three American Heroes
with a dispiriting flatness.”
The Financial Times gave a two-star noticing, saying:
“Re-read the news story: that was good. Don’t bother with the movie.”
Entertainment Weekly gave a D-grade, saying the film is a
“well-intentioned disaster”.
The movie received a lowly 25% score on Rotten Tomatoes.
Film Review: The 15:17 to Paris, by Daniel Eagan, Film Journal
International, Thursday, February 8th 2108
Three friends help prevent a terrorist attack on a train.
No-frills account from director Clint Eastwood with the real-life heroes as
stars.
When they stopped a terrorist attack onboard a high-speed
train to Paris, Spencer Stone, Alek Skarlatos and Anthony Sadler won acclaim
around the world. A best-selling book followed. When Clint Eastwood decided to
turn the incident into a movie, he took the unusual step of casting the three
friends as themselves.
Like the book, Dorothy Blyskal's screenplay opens up the
story, going back to the trio's childhood in Sacramento, Calif. All three are
troublemakers at school. Spencer underachieves in college before failing at
several Air Force positions. Alek goes from community college to the Oregon
National Guard, ending up in Afghanistan.
Working with his longtime cinematographer Tom Stern,
Eastwood shoots these scenes with customary efficiency, refusing for the most
part to pump up emotions. As a result, The 15:17 to Paris can seem dry at
times, with long stretches devoted to military training or to scenes that have
no obvious payoff.
Eastwood begins the movie with glimpses of Ayoub (Ray
Corasani), the terrorist who brought guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition
aboard the Paris-bound train. Later the story will occasionally flash forward
from a school scene to an incident on the train. Sometimes the connections are
obvious, like the history teacher who asks his students if they would know what
to do in an emergency.
At other times the shifts feel contrived, an expedient way
to remind viewers that the scenes they are watching will eventually get
somewhere, mean something. Throw in Spencer's obsession with guns and strong
religious beliefs, and The 15:17 could easily be passed off as red meat for
right-wingers.
But look again. Who are these heroes? They are kids who were
bullied, who came from broken homes, poorly educated, not too smart to begin
with. They are the ugly Americans touring Europe, the ones with selfie sticks
and sweatpants, the ones who don't understand the language or the history of
the places they are visiting. They're loud, they drink too much, and they pray.
What the movie points out is that if we want to call them
heroes, this is who they are. If you think what they do and say isn't exciting
enough, this is still the story they lived, the story they wanted to tell.
Eastwood asks us to see beyond our prejudices and embrace lives that seem so
different from ours.
The attack itself, shot aboard a moving train, is a model of
taut, focused filmmaking. Eastwood and editor Blu Murray cut out all the flab,
fashioning a sequence of textbook intensity.
The 15:17 ends with the heroes receiving the Legion of Honor
from French President François Hollande (a combination of real and recreated
footage), then enjoying a parade in Sacramento, Eastwood choosing not to
examine the complications the three subsequently experienced.
As actors, Stone, Skarlatos and Sadler look comfortable and
believable, although without the obvious star power to suggest future film
roles. (Their performances aren't unprecedented—Congressional Medal of Honor
winner Audie Murphy played himself in 1955's To Hell and Back.) What Eastwood
has done, with his customary skill, is show us why we should care about them.
The 15:17 to Paris, by Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out London,
Thursday 8th February, 2018
Director Clint Eastwood bobbles a true tale of heroism,
stranding three men who never should have been asked to re-enact their own
courageous moment.
By one cosmic yardstick, the three American tourists who
foiled a terrorist attack on a 2015 Amsterdam-to-Paris train were in exactly
the right place at the right time: They acted when they had to, wrestling an
armed gunman to the floor and preventing untold carnage. Those same three
Americans don’t act in ‘The 15:17 to Paris’ – they can’t act, because even
though Spencer Stone, Alek Skarlato and Anthony Sadler have been cast as
themselves, they’re not actors. They’re at best beefy twentysomethings with
muscle memory. Dramatically inert and flatter than a buzz cut, the movie ends
up diminishing their moment of heroism by turning it into a defiantly
amateurish piece of junior-high-grade theatrics (the film asks the impossible
of people who have already achieved greatness), as if to say: Reality doesn’t need
to be gussied up. Alas, it does, and saying so doesn’t make you disrespectful.
Anything that could have been done to shift focus away from
these bros – who come across as likeable but blank interlopers in their own
story – should have been considered. Instead, the paint-by-numbers screenplay
by Dorothy Blyskal (mainly a production assistant prior to this job) emphasizes
their deficiencies. It leans heavily on cringe-inducing moments of obviousness,
setting up the boyhood friends as detention-prone loners who prefer playing
wargames in the woods. You get no less than two parent-teacher conferences in
the first 20 minutes alone, both of which end in sassy you-don’t-know-my-son
walkouts. (Jenna Fischer and Judy Greer, as the mothers, try to speed things along.)
Shifting to the adult Stone, Skarlato and Sadler, the movie piles on an hour of
vacation travelogue in Rome, Venice and Amsterdam, during which beers are
quaffed, selfies are taken and European women are ogled (but never disrespected
or even touched). The profanity-free squareness is close to excruciating: you
won’t believe how boring it is partying with real-life heroes.
Say what you will about director Clint Eastwood’s onscreen
rectitude as a gun-toting icon, he’s never been a safe filmmaker. Just as only
Nixon could open China, only Eastwood could smuggle paralyzing doubts into the
underrated ‘American Sniper’; his war films ‘Flags of Our Fathers’ and ‘Letters
from Iwo Jima’ are remarkably critical. ‘The 15:17 to Paris’ won’t help his
defenders. Perversely, you wait (and wait) for the train attack, hinted at in
flurries of flash-forwards. It’s over in an instant: competently staged but
coolly played. Eastwood makes the film feel like a rote assignment: an act of
patriotic duty trying to pass as drama. Already we’ve heard several times,
ominously, about the 'greater purpose' these guys are 'catapulting' toward
(seriously, the script is that dull-witted). Even if it weren’t already set on
a track, the movie has only one way forward: a straight line into mundanity.
Three Average Guys Make The 15:17 to Paris worth watching,
by STEPHANIE ZACHAREK, Time magazine, February 8th, 2018
The stars of The 15:17 to Paris, directed by Clint Eastwood,
aren’t movie stars at all. They aren’t even actors. Instead, they’re a trio of
young men, friends from childhood, who in 2015 foiled an attempted attack on a
train from Amsterdam to Paris, subduing and disarming a man who had just opened
fire on passengers with an AK-47. In the movie’s tense climax, Spencer Stone,
Alek Skarlatos and Anthony Sadler–then a U.S. Airman, National Guardsman and college
student, respectively–re-create the moment in which they leaped to action
almost without thinking. It sounded brave enough when we all first heard about
it. But it’s even more remarkable as Eastwood renders it, and the men–all
charmers, with none of the stagy stiffness common to nonactors–bring that
moment to life so vividly that its very casualness is a jolt.
That’s the best part of the movie. The second best are the
scenes in which the three friends, before boarding that train, knock around
Europe–they’re just regular dudes on vacation, kicking back steins of beer and
hoping to meet pretty girls. (With their selfie sticks and well-mannered
bonhomie, they’re the kind of Americans whom Europeans claim to dislike but
secretly love.) The sections detailing the men’s childhood in Sacramento, with
Judy Greer and Jenna Fischer playing beleaguered moms? Not so exciting. But
then, the very averageness of these conscientious, gutsy guys is precisely the
point.