Monday, 18 December 2023
Happy Christmas and Yearly review 2023
Tuesday, 12 December 2023
J.K. Simmons Joins Nicholas Hoult in Eastwood’s Juror #2
Friday, 1 December 2023
Photo Opportunity #44
Photo Opportunity #44
For our final Photo Opportunity of 2023, I’ve picked one of several photos that were taken at The Cannes International Film Festival on May 20th, 2008 in Cannes, France. Clint is pictured here with Angelina Jolie, the star of his latest film 'Changeling' which was premiering at the Palais festivals. Jolie was heavily pregnant (with twins) at the time with her then partner Brad Pitt who was also in attendance. The premiere was quite a family event, Clint was there with his then wife Dina Ruiz and Clint’s children Kyle and Alison also attended.
The President of the Official Jury was American actor and director Sean Penn. Changeling was entered officially in competition, but it was The Class (Entre les murs), directed by Laurent Cantet which would go on to win the Palme d'Or.
Thursday, 23 November 2023
Clint seen filming on Georgia set of Juror No. 2
Clint seen filming on Georgia set of Juror No. 2
Brian Marks for Dailymail.com
Clint Eastwood showed he's not ready to slow down yet when he was spotted filming his upcoming film Juror No. 2 on Tuesday in Savannah, Georgia.
The 93-year-old actor-turned-director was shooting a scene for the courtroom thriller featuring his stars Nicholas Hoult, 33, and Toni Collette, 51.
The project has been called the moviemaker's 'final film,' with The Hollywood Reporter describing it as an attempt to find 'one last project in order to be able to ride off into the sunset with his head held high,' though neither Eastwood nor Juror No. 2's studio Warner Bros. have said he is planning to retire after completing it.
Eastwood was previously seen on set with Hoult in June, after the writer's strike had started but just before his cast had to stop working due to the recently wrapped actor's strike.
At the time, photos from Savannah station WSAV show the director with the clean-shaven look he has mostly displayed for the past few decades, but he was seen with a surprising bushy white beard while filming on Tuesday.
Clint looked particularly intrigued while watching footage from the shoot next to his long-time camera operator Stephen Campanelli, who first began working with him on 1995's romance classic The Bridges of Madison County.
It’s great to see the man back on active duty.
Tuesday, 21 November 2023
Chris Messina Joins Hoult in Clint Eastwood’s ‘Juror No. 2’
Friday, 17 November 2023
Eastwood / Universal mystery promo leaflet
Wednesday, 1 November 2023
Irene Cara’s Personalised 1984 City Heat Movie Cast Jacket
Photo Opportunity #43
Wednesday, 25 October 2023
Richard Roundtree, Star of Shaft, dies at 81
Tuesday, 24 October 2023
The Passing of Roxanne Tunis
The Passing of Roxanne Tunis
Sometimes, news reaches me a little late, and a little unexpectedly. Sadly, this was the case today when I received news that actress, dancer and model Roxanne Tunis had died back on June 23rd. She was aged 93.
Roxanne was born on April 13th, 1930 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Clint and Roxanne met during the filming of Rawhide and were in a relationship from 1959. Confirming the death, her daughter Kimber Eastwood said that her father was as sad as she was. She further said, “Our lives are forever changed.”
A daughter of Latino immigrants, Pietro Trunzo and Theresa Costa, Roxanne met Clint on the set of the television show where she worked as a stuntwoman. They fell in love immediately. But at that time, Roxanne was married to Jack Watson Scheck Jr. and Eastwood was married to Maggie Johnson.
Clint made sure that Roxanne was well cared for helped her in her career. She became a guest star in Hang 'em High in 1968. Later, she appeared in Eastwood’s directorial venture Breezy in 1973 and the action comedy Every Which Way but Loose in 1978. Roxanne also appeared in other movies such as Take her, she's mine (1963) and Blue City (1986).
Kimber was born to Roxanne and Clint on the 17th June 1964, shortly after Clint arrived in Rome to begin filming A Fistful of Dollars. In 1980 Roxanne moved to Denver, Colorado and lived a peaceful life. She dedicated her life to meditation and taught many courses on the subject.
Roxanne, to her credit, never felt the need to exploit or expose details about her relationship with Clint. It was both private and personal, and because of that she never felt the need to speak to any form of media.
Our respect, thoughts and condolences go to all of Roxanne’s family and friends. RIP
Monday, 23 October 2023
Fairy tales in New York: Badge 373 / Coogan’s Bluff Double-Bill
Fairy tales in New York: Badge 373 / Coogan’s Bluff Double-Bill
Here’s an incredibly rare UK 60” x 40” poster teaming up Badge 373 (1973) with Coogan’s Bluff (1968). It’s hard to pinpoint exactly what year this double-bill was shown, although it was probably around 1974. Badge 373 was not a success, either at the box office or with the critics. The New York neo noir crime thriller film inspired, as was The French Connection, by the life and career of Eddie Egan, here called "Eddie Ryan". Ryan (Robert Duvall), a tough, no-nonsense, abrasive and racist Irish NYPD cop, has to turn in his badge after scuffling with a Puerto Rican suspect who then falls to his death from a rooftop, but that doesn't stop him from heading out on a one-man crusade to find out who killed his partner. Like The French Connection, the film again starred the real-life Eddie Egan, this time as Lt. Scanlon.
Badge 373 was a Paramount picture, so fell under the European CIC banner (Cinema International Corporation) which distributed both Paramount and Universal pictures. So, it probably made sense to team the film up with an Eastwood movie, if only to try and pull back some of it’s fairly poor box-office. As Coogan’s Bluff was set in New York and a crime thriller (and a Universal film) – it seemed like a perfectly logical pairing.
In fact, this was not the only time that Badge 373 was teamed up with an Eastwood movie and perhaps reflected Paramount desperation to try and retrieve some sort of revenue on their film. It was probably around the same time that it was also doubled up with Play Misty for Me (1971) also a Universal Picture.
I’m not sure if either of these double-bill pairings ever materialised outside of the UK, but their limited showings here certainly resulted in a couple of seriously rare posters.
My thanks to Davy Triumph.