Saturday, 5 December 2009

INVICTUS L.A. premiere December 3rd 2009

INVICTUS L.A. premiere December 3rd Beverly Hills

Forget Team Edward and Team Jacob, it's Team Clint that really rules Hollywood.
Just ask Angelina Jolie, who brought part of her own team to Clint's "Invictus" premiere at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Theater on Thursday night.
"I'd do anything for Clint," she said, flashing that dazzling smile and sporting a new, much-lighter 'do. Angelina, Brad and Maddox Jolie-Pitt, the eldest kid in their ever-expanding family, avoided the red carpet madness and slipped into the theater to see Eastwood's latest, amazing film. Set in 1995, the true-life story focuses on how Nelson Mandela and the predominantly white South African national rugby team brought the apartheid-torn country together by winning the Rugby World Cup.
Orlando Bloom followed Brangelina's lead, keeping a low profile, while Eastwood, his wife Dina, and a passel of his own offspring, including daughters Alison and Francesca and sons Kyle and Scott, joined "Invictus" stars Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon on the red carpet.
Inside, after Eastwood fans Ken Watanabe, Kenny Chesney, Michelle Monaghan, Herbie Hancock, and Ken Howard found their seats and Warner Bros. Chairman Barry Meyer crowed a bit about the "Invictus" awards received that morning from the National Board of Review.
"We're extremely proud of this movie," he cheered, then listed the wins - Best Director for Clint Eastwood, Best Actor for Morgan Freeman, their Freedom of Expression prize, and Top Ten Films of 2009.

Team Clint celebrated lavishly at the after party, held in the Beverly Wilshire Hotel ballroom, with the Eastwood family filling one couch pit, the Damon crew taking over another (with Orlando Bloom in tow), and even Nelson Mandela's daughter Zindzi and grandson Zwaloba ensconced in a third. The party was made complete with a jazz band, groaning tables of filet mignon and salmon, and gaggles of gigantic guys who star as the rugby players in the uplifting flick. Even the real captain of the South Africa Springboks, Francoise Pienaar, the guy Matt Damon plays so convincingly in the film, was on hand.
"All the rugby sequences were real," Clint said with a grin as he greeted the endless stream of well-wishers. "Those guys are really tough!"

Friday, 4 December 2009

MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE SALUTES CLINT EASTWOOD December 1st 2009

MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE
SALUTES CLINT EASTWOOD
December 1, 2009
583 Park Avenue, New York

Clint Eastwood has made more than 50 feature films as an actor, director, and producer in a career spanning five decades. As a film actor, Eastwood became a star as The Man with No Name in Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns and as police inspector Harry Callahan in the Dirty Harry films. Since Play Misty for Me, his first film as a director, Eastwood has received critical acclaim for a diverse body of films including White Hunter, Black Heart; A Perfect World; The Bridges of Madison County; Bird; Mystic River; Letters from Iwo Jima; and Gran Torino. He won Academy Awards for Best Director and Best Picture for Unforgiven and Million Dollar Baby, and was also nominated for Best Actor in both films. His new film, Invictus, stars Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon, and opens in December.

This will be the Museum's 25th annual Salute. Past honorees include Tom Cruise, Robert DeNiro, Tom Hanks, Dustin Hoffman, Ron Howard, Steve Martin, Al Pacino, Sidney Poitier, Julia Roberts, Martin Scorsese, and Steven Spielberg.

Gala screening: "Invictus," Paris Theater, New York City, 6:30 p.m.
Gala dinner: 583 Park Ave., New York City, following screening

If he had the spare time or inclination, Clint Eastwood could give his fellow actors lessons in grace. On the red carpet Tuesday night outside the Paris Theater, as Morgan Freeman and Hilary Swank merely posed for photos and skipped interviews, Eastwood, who was being honored by the Museum of the Moving Image, gave one-on-one face time to every reporter.

"I don't think I'm intimidating once you get to know me," he said, even engaging in some playful banter with Swank.

"Hil looks swell. How are you doing darling?”
“You look handsome,” she said back.

“Thank you, dear. We’re gonna get you an ophthalmologist right away,” said Eastwood.
It was just one of many glimpses at Eastwood's work and demeanor over the course of the night. After a special screening of his forthcoming directorial effort, "Invictus," starring Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela and Matt Damon as the South African rugby captain he supports and befriends, groups of black tie-clad guests were bussed over to 583 Park Avenue for the museum's salute to Eastwood. Arie and Coco Kopelman, Ralph and Ricky Lauren, Coralie Charriol Paul, Kelly Rutherford, Kyra Sedgwick, David Lauren and Lauren Bush ate a speedy dinner before viewing clips from the 79 year-old's oeuvre including "Unforgiven," "A Fistful of Dollars" and "Million Dollar Baby." An impressive lineup of actors paid tribute to his seemingly boundless talents.

"I’ve kind of come to judge good jobs and directors by how my wife feels about them. My wife loves Clint Eastwood," said Damon, the first of the presenters. "Not only because her husband was happy every day when he came home, because I got to do what I wanted to do, the way I wanted to do it and felt completely fulfilled creatively but because I had breakfast with her and the kids every morning and dinner with them every night. I never felt I was sacrificing family life or my work it was the perfect blend. And that’s the life I hope I can carve out for myself as I go forward."

Marcia Gay Harden recalled her first meeting with Eastwood.
"Like many of you in the room I knew him as Rowdy Yates and I had a girl crush that gave way to fear and a little bit of lust I’ll admit it when ‘Dirty Harry’ came out and so when I met him for the first time on the set of ‘Space Cowboys’ this one dimensional idea of Clint didn’t serve me very well," she said. "He came into the hair and makeup trailer and the 13 year old girl in me took over and I flung myself across the trailer and hugged him and said, 'Hi, I’m Marcia Gay Harden.' And he said, 'I know, I cast you.'"
For Kevin Bacon, an Eastwood casting proved a life-changing experience.
"A very, very famous and amazing actress once said to me if you ever have the chance to work with Eastwood, just do it, just say yes, just say yes, don’t read the script, just say yes. And I would tell you who the actress was but Bob Dylan told me never to drop a name. So I said yes and I got the chance to work with him. But what she didn’t tell me was that for the rest of my career I would be answering questions about what it was like to work with Clint," recalled Bacon. "How does he do it? How does he make one brilliant film after another? How does he make it look so easy? And I tell them what I’m going to tell you here tonight – I have no freakin’ idea. I’m just so happy I said yes."

Swank kept her remarks short and sweet, in keeping with the honoree's famously succinct speech. "So since Clint has made an art of playing characters of few words, I’ll follow his lead. I love and I adore you. I can’t tell you how thrilled I am to be here to honor you and I truly can’t think of anyone more deserving of this worthwhile tribute," she said.

And Freeman confessed to a bit of a man-crush on his friend and director.
"It’s such a pleasure to see all these clips this evening and be reminded of Clint’s genius. Maybe we’ve seen most if not all of them before but watching them again reminds us that as an actor Clint is absolutely impossible to stop looking at. And I’m straight," he said to much laughter.
When Eastwood finally took to the stage, to a standing ovation, he was clearly humbled by the proceedings.
"You can have a little bit of skill, but you’ve gotta have a lot of luck and the only thing I’ve ever really been good at was picking other people to be around me to make me look decent. And that goes for the crew right on up to production and casting. Maybe I was smart to cast Morgan Freeman, and Matt Damon and Kevin Bacon and Marcia Gay Harden and Hil the Swill, my boxer. We’ve had some wonderful times. It made a senior citizen very happy tonight," he said. "You saw me make my day and I shot people and all that stuff and I guess that was great fun. I looked at that 'Fistful of Dollars' clip and thought, God that’s opera at it’s very worst, but it’s so much fun to do, and people ask me 'Do you miss doing those kind of things?' and I say, 'No I don’t miss them.' They were great fun at the time, but it’s much more fun to be doing other things because as you get older you get wiser hopefully, some of us do and some of us regress and hopefully I’m not regressing."

Eastwood's Youth wave surges: Next generation of actors praise director's technique

Eastwood's youth wave surges
Next generation of actors praise director's technique
by ANNA STEWART
Variety Nov 30th 2009

Dirty Harry as a gentle, sensitive mentor? Well, that's how a generation of young actors sees the gruff, grizzly, monosyllabic guy.
Four-time Oscar winner (and Thalberg recipient) Clint Eastwood may have given them plenty of lessons in tough love onscreen, but on the set his most recent crop of proteges, ages 11-31, learned to have nothing but respect and admiration for their boss.
"I thought he would be a real taskmaster, a real badass. Not at all. He's the most laid-back person ever. His energy is like an old jazz cat," says Jesse Bradford, who played the real-life soldier Rene Gagnon in "Flags of Our Father."
"He didn't treat me like a little kid like other directors do" says Gattlin Griffith, the young lost boy in "The Changeling." "He made me feel like I was a grown-up, and that made me feel really cool."
"At first I was intimidated by 'that look,' but after a couple of days, I realized 'that look' wasn't intimidating at all," says Yuki Matsuzaki of "Letters From Iwo Jima." "He was much warmer than that."
On set with Eastwood, how did his young guns make his day?
Eastwood, for years, has worked with the same crew, and follows a simple set of rules: Cast off the tape. Shoot the rehearsal. One take. Maybe two. Max: three. Direct only if the actors are screwing up. And no coddling.
"He doesn't really seem to be interested in directing you, or whispering in your ear," says "Gran Torino's" Christopher Carley. "It's a little jarring at first, but then you realize the reason he's not getting in your space is that he likes what you're doing."
One camera operator offered the reassuring line, "If he's talking to you a lot, there's a problem."
Matsuzaki admits he, too, did not get any special direction from Eastwood. Finally, he asked, "I am assuming the script does not tell everything?" The director's Zenlike response: "The script is like a river flowing. As long as the river gets to the ocean, it doesn't matter if there are a few obstacles on the way."
Matsuzaki reveals that Eastwood said to him that his helmer job is 80% done when he finishes the casting. The actor concluded that it was this director's way of telling him, "I trust you."
Emmy Rossum found comfort in Eastwood's standing right next to the camera in "Mystic River." "He's right in your eye line. There's this communication that you have with him. It's unlike any other films that I've been on," says the actress.

Eastwood may give his actors plenty of room to develop their characters, but along with this creative freedom comes a considerable amount of pressure. "He puts a lot of faith in his actors to show up knowing what they're doing," says Bradford. "There are no kid gloves."
The star admits that Eastwood's fast-paced style "forced" him to do his homework "more than usual, and to pay close attention. His crew just works on the fly. If you're in your trailer, there's literally a chance -- if you weren't an integral part of the scene -- - that they'll shoot it without you. We used to joke that the Steadicam operator would just reframe a little bit and now he's just got a two shot instead of a three shot."
Griffith got his "two takes" lesson from Eastwood when he was 8 years old. "He taught me was that more takes doesn't make it a better movie." The 11-year-old veteran adds, "Now that I've worked in a couple of more movies, I use that. It really does help."
"Million Dollar Baby" co-star Anthony Mackie recalls doing his first take with Hilary Swank and Michael Pena. "Clint was like, 'That was great. Let's do something else,'" says Mackie. "I was like, 'Whoa, Clint. Do you think we could do one more?' Clint was like, 'Everybody take a break. Anthony, come here.' I said to myself, 'Damn! Clint's going to shoot me with his 45 or he's going to fire me!'" Instead, Eastwood told Mackie, "I cast you 'cause you're a good actor. So if you're bad, it's my fault. Let's move on. Next shot."
"Gran Torino," was Ahney Her's first acting role. "It was the gang scene and I was scared because I didn't know what to do," Her recalls. "I didn't know how strongly to come off. Clint told me to try to be the character but, at the same time, to be myself. He allowed me to be free. I could finally let all the nerves go."
 
During the filming of "Gran Torino," Eastwood asked Carley what he thought of the process.
"It's great," the actor replied. "Everybody's so relaxed."
"Well, I've been working with these guys for years," said Eastwood. "We're just making a movie. What's the big deal?"

Eastwood practices fiscal discipline, Child of Depression applies lesson to directing

It’s certainly been a busy week in the Eastwood calendar, with the Premiere of Invictus, an honour at The Museum of the Moving Image and a cover shoot for Parade magazine.

But first, here’s a nice article that appeared in Variety this week on Nov 30th by Iain Blair

To be a successful director in Hollywood, you need talent; a vision; a knack for picking the right material and projects and stars; and all the leadership qualities necessary to marshal and inspire a small army of actors, crew members and production staff.
But to maintain an A-list career over decades demands some other key ingredients in the helmer's makeup -- most notably, stamina, discipline, flexibility and, perhaps above all, a healthy regard for budgets, schedules and the bottom line -- the cold, hard realities in the dreammaking equation.
And in these tough economic times, the latter qualities have become all the more important. Hollywood is strewn with the ruins and rubble of once great studios and companies laid to waste by the hubris and profligate spending of visionary -- and talented -- men (the name Cimino can still send shivers down executives' spines).
Clint Eastwood, a proud child of the Great Depression, is not one of those men. "I grew up in an era when you knew the value of a buck, and I've never forgotten it," he says. "My old man used to preach to me, 'Nothing comes from nothing, no one's going to give you anything,' and that's probably the best advice I've ever had."
Ask him what drives him nuts, both in life and in the movies, and he shoots back: "Waste. Total ineptness, total inefficiency."
Eastwood, in turn, has harnessed such lifelong aversions into a careerlong, pragmatic pursuit of the most efficient and economical business and production models. And while so many of his contemporaries tolerated inflated and ballooning budgets, and then burned out, Eastwood, a tightfisted, fiscal conservative in the grand tradition of Hitchcock and Preminger, is having the last laugh.
"Gran Torino," the biggest box office hit (more than $260 million worldwide) of Eastwood's entire career, made when he turned 78, was budgeted in "the mid '30s" according to Rob Lorenz, Eastwood's producing partner since the late 1990s. The film was shot in Michigan "for the great tax incentive," reports Bill Bowling, worldwide locations executive for Warner Bros. Incentives also help explain why the thrifty Eastwood ended up using Iceland, of all places, to double for the South Pacific tropical island of Iwo Jima when he shot "Flags of Our Fathers." It may sound counterintuitive, but tax breaks -- and the geology -- "made total sense," Lorenz adds.
"The minute he arrives on set, he knows the meter's running and he's very focused," notes Lorenz, who has made 14 films with Eastwood and who won an Oscar nom for producing -- with Eastwood and Steven Spielberg -- "Letters From Iwo Jima." That film's compressed schedule -- a mere 33 days -- and tight budget "says it all," he adds. "Clint doesn't waste a penny or a minute."

Eastwood's new film, "Invictus," starring Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela, was shot entirely on location in and around Johannesburg and Cape Town, and produced with Hollywood veteran Mace Neufeld ("Patriot Games," "No Way Out"). "It was my first time working with Clint, and if I'd worked with him since day one, I'd have been able to make twice as many films," he says dryly, listing the reasons why: "One, he shoots the script, unlike a lot of directors who want to keep rewriting. This was a totally white script -- with none of the usual colored pages for revisions -- and that was a first for me. Second, he knows exactly what he wants to get, and most of his production team have been with him for 10, 12 years, so they all know what's expected from them. There's no waiting for the usual lighting setups. And third, he never uses a video recorder on set."
Neufeld estimates that this efficiency alone saves "maybe 90 minutes a day. Clint watches action on a handheld monitor, it's generally just two, three takes, and there's no playback for actors. Then he moves on.
"There's no prolonged discussion or angst about how to do a scene, and it also helps that actors know his reputation, so they're all ready to go when they arrive."
And despite a seemingly leisurely pace -- "Clint likes 10 a.m. calls and wrapping by 5 p.m., which for me was unheard of -- I'm used to 6:30 a.m. calls and shooting well into the night" -- the producer reports that "Invictus" came in under budget and a week ahead of schedule. "He's simply the most efficient, judicious director I've ever worked with."
"It's that Depression-era upbringing," says Lorenz, who's currently producing "Hereafter," Eastwood's next film, which is already shooting in London and Paris. "We'll walk out of my office, and Clint will go back and turn out the lights."

Tuesday, 24 November 2009

Eastwood Interviewed INDEX


01. Clint Eastwood: The Straight Shooter 2006 Interview with The Directors Guild of America
02. Clint Eastwood: The Elder Statesman Nov 30th 2009 The Hollywood Reporter
03. Clint on Clint: Empire Magazine November 2009
04. Clint Eastwood on INVICTUS by Douglas Thompson 17th Jan 2010
05. For a Few Million More L.A. Weekly December 16th 2004
06. Daily Telegragh Interview February 3rd 2010
07. Jazz Times Interview September 2007
08. The Films are for him. Got That? New York Times Dec 10th 2008 
09. Clint Eastwood Explains Why He Usually Goes for the First or Second Take

Eastwood interviewed # 01 THE STRAIGHT SHOOTER 2006 DGA

In 2006 Eastwood spoke to The Directors Guild of America (DGA)

Few filmmakers have embodied the no-nonsense attitude and bedrock values of the American West more than Clint Eastwood. In a career spanning 35 years, 26 films and numerous awards including the DGA Lifetime Achievement Award, he has never stopped doing his best. The results speak for themselves.
There are no second acts in American lives,” F. Scott Fitzgerald famously wrote in the pages of his unfinished Hollywood novel, The Last Tycoon. But if ever there was an American life that threatened to disprove Fitzgerald’s aphorism, it’s Clint Eastwood’s. During a career in movies that spans a half-century, he has twice reached the pinnacle of his profession–first as an actor and then as a director–earning respect even from many who had initially dismissed him as nothing more than a square-jawed tough guy.
He has directed 26 feature films in 35 years, acting in nearly all of them and composing original music for nearly a dozen, in the process he’s amassed eight Oscar nominations and two wins; two DGA Awards for Outstanding Directorial Achievement and even a Grammy nomination. Though he has been deservedly venerated as the last “classical” director working in Hollywood–a testament to the economy of his storytelling and the efficiency of his working method–Eastwood has never shied away from risk, balancing intelligent, accessible crowd-pleasers with projects that reside at the dark, unsentimental extreme of films made by major directors.
Certainly, few would disagree that Eastwood, who earlier this year received the DGA’s Lifetime Achievement Award, has built a career worth celebrating. But if there seems something premature about recognizing Eastwood for his “body of work,” it’s that that body only keeps growing richer and more varied with each passing year. Indeed, at age 75 and with two new films planned for release within the next 12 months, Eastwood seems very much in his prime.
And he looks it, too. Fit and trim inside his imposing 6-foot, 4-inch frame, he’s a portrait of growing old gracefully (albeit without any plastic surgery enhancements). “Other than a belt sander, there’s nothing they can do for me,” Eastwood once joked with his characteristic self-deprecating wit. He was in a similarly jovial mood this January as we sat down in his longtime bungalow on the Warner Bros. lot to talk about his career–past, present and future.

Q: You’ve reached that stage of your career now where you’re starting to receive a lot of ‘lifetime achievement’ honors.
A: Makes you kind of wonder: Are they trying to tell me to get lost?

Q: You’ve been directing films for four decades, and while it’s fairly common nowadays for actors to direct, it was much less common back in the early 1970s, when you were starting out. When did you begin to think that directing was something you wanted to do?
A: I started thinking about it back in the Rawhide days, and I tried to set things up to direct some episodes of the show. Then, the production company reneged on their promise that I could do it. They said that CBS didn’t want actors who were in the shows to be directing the shows. So I kind of dropped the idea for a while and then, after I’d been working with Sergio Leone on A Fistful of Dollars, observing the crews in Europe and getting a broader look at filmmaking around the world, I got interested again.

Above: Clint observes the sometimes curious, directive style of Sergio Leone while filming The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in 1966

Q: So how did you get your first job as a Director?
A: In the late 1960s, a friend of mine, Jo Heims, had written a little treatment called Play Misty for Me. I optioned it from her and then I promptly went off to Europe to act in Where Eagles Dare (1968), which took a long time to make. In the meantime, she’d had an offer to sell the project to Universal. When I finally came back, it turned out that nothing had happened with it. So I started thinking about it again. It was a small picture. I wanted to change the setting from Los Angeles to Monterey County, and in that way the disc jockey would be a big fish in a smaller pond, which seemed more logical to me. So I went to Lew Wasserman and he said, ‘Yeah, you can do it, but not under the current deal you have. You’ll do it for DGA minimum.’ My agent called me and said, ‘But they don’t want to pay you!’ and I said, ‘They shouldn’t. I should have to prove myself first.’ To be honest, I would have been willing to pay them! So we did the film for under $1 million and it became a moderate little success. It was a great experience, and I had the bug after that. Jo had written another script called Breezy (1973), so then I directed that and went on to High Plains Drifter (1973). I’ve never had a plan, in my career as an actor or a director, of what I was going to do next or what type of things I was looking for. Things would just pop up and I’d get a feeling about them.

Above: Clint films on the set of Play Misty for Me Nov 17th 1971

Q: That doesn’t answer the question, though, of how you actually learned how to direct.
A: I think the advantage of being an actor is that you’re on sets all the time, so you kind of know what to do, if you’ve been paying attention. When I was a contract player in 1954 and 1955 at Universal, I used to go around to sets all the time and watch people direct. I’d wander through, as much as they’d let you. Usually, the bigger the director was, the stricter they were about not having people just hanging around. I wanted to watch the actors for one thing, but I also became very curious about the director’s participation. I never got to work with any of the very big ‘A’ directors, except one time when I played a small part for Bill Wellman. But I did go on sets where Hitchcock and Douglas Sirk and people like that were working. Then there were all the Rawhide years, which were great because you were working every day, not just coming in for two days’ work and then being off for six months. And we had some good directors come through who’d done movies that I’d seen in the theaters over the years: Stuart Heisler, Laszlo Benedek, Tay Garnett. People like that.

Above: Planning ahead, Clint observes the camera set ups during the filming of Rawhide

Q: At that point in your career, the two movie directors you’d worked with most were Don Siegel and Sergio Leone. Did you talk to them at all about your desire to direct?
A: Only with Don. I was back working in the States by this time, and I’d worked with Don on several occasions and we’d become good friends. When I decided I wanted to direct, I went to him and I said, ‘You know, I’ve got this little project.’ I even asked him to read it for me. He liked the script and said, ‘You should direct it. Let me be the first to sign your DGA application card.’ So I got into the Guild and I was off and running.

Above: Directing Misty on the set with Don Siegel

Q: Does being recognized by the DGA with the Lifetime Achievement Award carry any special meaning for you?
A: I’ve been a member of the DGA for 36 years, and when I joined it in 1970, I was real pleased–pleased with being able to direct a film, but also with being able to join a group that included so many people I’d worked with and known along the way, like William Wellman and Robert Wise, and also so many people I admired: Frank Capra, Howard Hawks, John Ford. They all belonged to it. That’s what I said when I was up there on stage accepting the award.

Above: Clint accepts the DGA Lifetime Award Jan 28th 2006

Q: You have a reputation for working fast on the set, and Siegel had a similar reputation. Was that something you picked up from him?
A: Speed is just up to the individual. Some people think things over more; others work more instinctively. I’ve worked with some other fast directors–Bill Wellman wasn’t slow. He knew what he wanted, shot it and moved on. I came up through television, and in television you had to move fast. The important thing, of course, is what comes out on the screen. I like to move fast only because I think it works well for the actors and the crew to feel like we’re progressing forward. But I think the reputation that I have for speed is not necessarily a good one–you don’t want to do Plan 9 from Outer Space, where the gravestones fall over and you say, ‘I can’t do another take. We’re too busy. Move on.’ You’re still making a film that you want to be right. But I find, as an actor, that I worked better when the directors were working fast. That’s why I guess Don and I got along so well. You sustain the character for shorter periods. You’re not having to ask yourself, ‘Now where was I three days ago? What the hell is this scene all about? What are we doing here?’

Above: On Location for The Eiger Sanction, Clint wastes little time in moving on

Q: Is the filmmaking process significantly different for you when you’re acting in and directing a picture as opposed to just directing?
A: It is. You definitely split your concentration. Most actors who’ve turned to directing–William S. Hart, Stan Laurel, Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier–have had to be in the picture in order to get the directing job, and that’s what happened with me. Once in a while an actor comes along and gets a project going that he’s not also starring in—Redford with Ordinary People, for example–and that’s certainly the more ideal thing, to do one job and concentrate on that one job. I always expected to withdraw from acting at some point and just stay behind the camera, and in recent years, I’ve done that. Even when I think back on Unforgiven–I had a major role in it, but there’s also a lot of the picture that I’m not in. Being out of Mystic River was great. But then Million Dollar Baby comes along and there’s a great role in there for an older guy. Well, I’m an older guy. So, there you go. Never say never.

Left: With Mystic River, the focus was fixed on directing

Q: Did directing your own pictures then make it harder to go back and act for other directors?
A: I don’t think so. I actually think every actor should direct at some point to learn the hurdles and the obstacles the director faces and the concentration it takes–a concentration equal to that of the actor, just in a different way. I felt that directing made me much more sympathetic to what directors have to do. I think I was easier to work with as an actor after I’d directed a few times. When the director wanted another take for reasons other than performance, I didn’t bog down and say, ‘Come on, what do you need that for?’

Q: Were there certain directors whose visual style you particularly admired?
A: There were a lot of them. I remember when I was a kid growing up, before I was ever involved in movies at all, I always liked the look of certain directors. But in those days it wasn’t as fashionable to know who the director was. You knew who was in the picture–Gary Cooper or Ingrid Bergman–and you liked that person so you went to see that movie. You didn’t go because of the director. But later on you did. I liked Italian films–Monicelli, De Sica, Fellini. I always liked Kurosawa. And as I revisit old films now, there are some directors you appreciate more. You look at a picture like [John Ford’s] The Grapes of Wrath and you realize that it’s a small film shot in a relatively short period of time, and yet it has a lot of scope. [William Wellman’s] The Ox-Bow Incident is also an intimate story, shot partly on soundstages, where you can hear the echo when the actors speak–all things you’d now take out using technology–but it doesn’t take away from the movie.
Below: The Grapes of Wrath, Clint has mentioned this to be among his favourite films on many occasions.

Q: One of the most distinctive aspects of your own style, something that’s been consistent on your work with many different cinematographers–from Play Misty for Me through Million Dollar Baby–is the use of very low light levels.
A: I like getting on a realistic plane with the light. If you go back and look at some Westerns that were made by some of the most beloved directors of the 1930s and ‘40s, you see people walk from the outdoors into a brightly lit room and you wonder, ‘Where’d they get all that electricity back in 1850?’ If you look at Unforgiven as an example, which Jack Green and Tom Stern did a brilliant job lighting, they made it look like it was coal and oil lamps lighting everything. But in a lot of those old movies, there’s light all over the place and there’s no contrast. But you really don’t have to see everything. John Wayne had this theory that you had to see the eyes all the time, the eyes tell the story. I never believed that. You see the eyes when you need to see the eyes. And sometimes, what you don’t see is very appealing to the audience. You can dramatize a picture with shades of light.

Above: Much of Unforgiven is shot with a natural looking light

Q: You’ve also tended to work with many of the same crew people over and over again through the years, and have promoted your crew up through the ranks, like your current cinematographer Tom Stern, who started out with you as a gaffer.
A: If people want to progress to another division and they have the ambition, they should be allowed to fulfill their ambitions. Just like when I had the ambition to become a director. I work with a lot of people who started out as assistants. [Editor] Joel Cox started out in the mailroom. As you work with people over and over, you come to know what to expect. If you have a new person come on, that’s an unknown factor. Maybe it turns out to be a great surprise. Or you can get surprised the other way. But after a while, you get comfortable. A lot goes into making a film. I know a lot of cineastes only think of the director, the auteur theory and all that. But it’s a whole group, a company, that makes a movie, and it’s a company that works only as well as its weakest link. I try to get the enthusiasm of everybody–that’s been my best trick, if I have a best trick. I try to get everybody involved. If the janitor can come up with a great idea for a shot, that’s fine with me. There’re no proprietary interests. I try to keep my ego and everybody else’s ego out of it.

Above: Malpaso's regular film editor Joel Cox,'started out in the mailroom'

Q: When you start a film do you always have a sense of what you want, what it’s going to look like?
A: I always wanted to try something different. A lot goes into a film. But first you have to have a great story, a foundation; then you’ve got to figure out how you’re going to frame that story, how’s it going to look, how’s it going to sound. It’s hard to express it, because I don’t sit around and intellectualize it. A lot of times when I go to work, I have a picture in my mind of how things should be, but I don’t know why I have that picture. I just know that I want to get there and I’ve got to explain to people how we’re going to get there, or have people explain that to me.

Q: Unforgiven is frequently cited as the film that caused American critics and audiences to finally accept you as a serious artist, whereas that recognition had come considerably earlier from some foreign circles, notably France.
A: I’ve never thought about what other people think. I’ve always just thought–and I still think this way–that you make a film, you present it to the public and then it’s out there and it’s up to them to judge it. I just kept grinding them out, like a machinist, and I guess some people might go back and, in hindsight, say, ‘Well, this wasn’t so bad.’ The Outlaw Josey Wales, for example–I would say that, judging from the man on the street, that’s the most popular Western I’ve ever done. But Unforgiven did break through in a way.

Above: Eastwood still considers The Outlaw Josey Wales to be 'the most popular Western I’ve ever done'

Q: You’ve been directing films for thirty-five years, does it feel like you’re doing anything different now than when you started out?
A: A lot of people say, ‘Well, how come you’re doing better now than when you were 45 or 50?’ The answer is I don’t know. Maybe I’m not. Maybe 45 or 50 just wasn’t looked at in the same way. Or maybe I know more and I’m thinking more, doing better things, being more selective. Probably because I’m older now, I don’t feel compelled to do a lot of work. I’ll do a lot of work if it’s there, like in the last two years I’ve done two pictures back-to-back–Million Dollar Baby and Flags of Our Fathers. But these things just all came about. If they hadn’t come about, I’d probably be a much better golfer. Whereas back in the 1970s and ‘80s, I was doing more stuff. Some things you read and you say, ‘I love this script!’ Others you read and you go, ‘I like the script and I’ll do it.’ Now, I’m inclined to wait until I love the script.

Q: So many filmmakers complain about the time it takes to raise money and set projects up. But you’ve been fortunate in having a major studio–first Universal and then Warner Bros.–that was more or less willing to support whatever you wanted to do over the years.
A: Sure. A project like Bird (1988) was going nowhere when I grabbed it. It had been hanging around for a long time. It was owned by another studio and I talked Warner Bros. into trading something for it. Now, Warners might not have done that for someone else. So I’ve gotten a few films made that probably wouldn’t have been made otherwise. That goes for the last two, especially. They ended up successful despite the apprehension of the studio–so sometimes that studio thing works for you and sometimes against you. Warner Bros. wasn’t excited about doing Mystic River–they thought it was too dark. And they weren’t excited about doing Million Dollar Baby, because it was a woman’s boxing movie. But I didn’t see it like that; I saw it as a great love story. So it’s all about the way you look at it. But we got it made; that’s the main thing.

Above: Warner Bros. had some major reservations regarding Million Dollar Baby

Q: Is the difficulty you had making those two films representative of any larger changes you’ve observed in the industry over the last four decades?
A: We live right now in an era where the fad is to remake a television show or a movie that’s already been remade five other times. It’s tough for a lot of studios to say, ‘Let’s start from scratch.’ In the 1940s, they had writers on tap all the time who would pitch ideas to the studio personnel. But can you imagine pitching Sunset Blvd. or some of these classic films now? A picture like that would have to be done as an independent, just as Mystic River and Million Dollar Baby had to be done semi-independently. The good thing is that it’s come full circle in a way, with the studios forming independent divisions to finance smaller films, to take on projects that wouldn’t get made otherwise. George Clooney’s film, Good Night, and Good Luck, is another example of a film that probably wouldn’t be high on a studio’s list of things to do. I’ve always tried to influence the studio to not be afraid to do things that might not make a lot of money, but which they’ll be proud of thirty or forty years from now. That’s what I told [former Warner Bros. chairman and CEO] Bob Daly when I was doing Bird. I said, ‘I don’t know if this thing will make any money–it’s about jazz, it’s not very commercial, it’s a tragic story. But I can guarantee you that I’ll try to make a film you’ll be proud to have your logo on.’ That’s about all I can offer. That’s about all I can offer on any of these films.

Q: The writer of Unforgiven, David Webb Peoples, has said that you filmed what was basically the first draft of his script, which is certainly a departure from the Hollywood norm of ‘developing’ and rewriting things ad infinitum and calling in four or five writers. You seem to have enormous respect for the written word.
A: Some scripts come in and they’re just great to start with; I’ll use Unforgiven as the example. It was a good script. I got it in the early 1980s and waited until ’92 to make it. I called up the writer, David Peoples, and said, ‘I’m going to make your movie, but I want to change a few things. Can I run these ideas by you as I get them?’ He said, ‘Go ahead.’ But the more I fiddled with it, the more I realized I was screwing it up. It goes back to something Don Siegel used to say: So many times you get a great project and people want to kill it with improvements. And that’s exactly what I was doing with Unforgiven. So finally, I called David back and said, ‘Forget what I said about making those changes. I’m not doing anything except changing the title.’ It was originally called The William Munny Killings. Of course, once you get into a project, there are always some things that live up to or exceed your expectations, and certain other things that will be disappointing. So you have to be able to re-write on your feet as you’re working. But once in a while projects come along where everything fits together like a jigsaw puzzle–as it went together in your mind, it comes together on film.

Q: Is there a certain kind of atmosphere you try to create on the set?
A: I like to have fun. I like everyone to be in good humor. And I try to keep it quiet. I like an atmosphere that isn’t loaded with tension. I don’t like sets where people are yelling at each other. The thing I dislike the most is people going ‘Sssh sssh sssh,’ because they end up making more noise than the people they’re trying to sssh. I remember after I started directing I was on a picture over at MGM, I walked out on the soundstage and all of a sudden I hear this huge bell ringing, which meant they were going to start the scene, and I thought, ‘What is this shit?’ What happens when you’re doing a really sensitive scene, or a scene that demands a certain amount of concentration? You shouldn’t put a person through that. If you talk to the actors who’ve worked with me–Sean Penn, Tim Robbins–they love the fact that they can be ready to go without a lot of fanfare. And for actors coming on who haven’t had a lot of experience, it’s even better for them.

Q: How do you manage to keep the chatter down on the set?
A: I went to the White House for a dinner–I think Gerald Ford was President at the time–and I noticed that there were these secret service guys all around and they were all talking very quietly into these tiny headsets, carrying on entire conversations without disturbing anyone. So I came back here and I said, ‘Why the hell do you go on a movie set and people have open radios squawking and people yelling, ‘Hey, Al, put the light over here!’ We’ve got all this technology; certainly we can be as technologically sound as the Secret Service.’ So a guy who was working for me researched it, got the same headsets and then all of those conversations could take place without disturbing the whole set. You can be rehearsing the actors and the crew can be talking, but nobody’s hearing it. Sometimes you’re working with kids or people you don’t want to be conscious of the camera. This way you can roll the camera without them even knowing it, and you can get natural moments you wouldn’t get when someone’s screaming, ‘Silence! Rolling! Action!’

Q: Spontaneity seems to be important to you.
A: Just like in life. You react to things. It should seem to the audience that the actors are saying these words for the very first time. The actors are striving to make the words sound that way, and if it is the first time, more power to it. The longer it drags on, the more takes you do, the more the actor has to rely on technique to make it sound like it’s the first time. When you get down to 10 or 20 takes, it starts showing that it isn’t the first time, and you get that ponderous feeling. There’s a dullness to it. Good actors can sustain themselves, but it’s asking a lot out of them.

Q: At age 75, you’re now in the midst of what is arguably the most ambitious project of your career–the back-to-back movies Flags of Our Fathers and Red Sun, Black Sand, which will tell the story of the battle of Iwo Jima from, respectively, the American and Japanese perspectives.
A: I liked the book Flags of Our Fathers when I read it and I tried to buy it, but it had already been purchased by DreamWorks. So I went off and did other things and then I ran into Steven [Spielberg] one time–we had worked well together on Bridges of Madison County–and he asked me if I’d do it. And I said, ‘Sure.’ Paul Haggis came on board as the writer and we had many discussions about which way to go with it, and the more I kept reading the material about Iwo Jima, which was the biggest battle in Marine Corps history, the more I started thinking, ‘Who devised all of this, digging tunnels and living underground like rats?’ So I started reading some books by Lieutenant General Kuribayashi [the Japanese commander at Iwo Jima]. It was interesting to me that he was going against a lot of the norms of Japanese military strategy. I became fascinated by the guy. And I wondered what it would have been like to be a guy living in those holes, knowing you were going to be killed. Americans were sent into battle knowing it was going to be tough, but that they’d come back–‘When Johnny Comes Marching Home’ and all that. But the Japanese were sent there knowing they were going to dig these foxholes and that’s where they were going to be buried. So out of this comes a script that Paul kind of supervised–he mentored a young woman of Japanese descent who wrote it. It’s a different story–same battle, but different story.

Q: So, what keeps you going?
A: A lot of people retire because that’s their desire and they feel good about doing it, and I always thought I’d feel that way someday. I always thought someday I’d go, ‘OK, that’s enough of that. Let’s just sit out here on the beach in Hawaii.’ But I haven’t come to it yet. The reason I still do it is that it’s not only fun–which is important, it should be fun–but because I learn something new with every job. And that’s the best way to stave off senility–to always be learning something, no matter what profession you’re in. I’m not saying there’s never a time to quit, but there’s no set time.

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Clint and Morgan attend 2009 GQ Men of the Year Party


November 18th LA
GQ recently celebrated their upcoming “Men of the Year” 2009 Issue with a lounge party at the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, California. So how do you qualify to be even considered one of the “Men of the Year” and to party with these folks just Get Right, handle business, and look sharp. The party was located in LA and of course some of Hollywood’s biggest and brightest stars came through to hang out. GQ will be releasing the “Men of the Year” issue in the next few days across the country featuring President Barack Obama who is the Leader of the Year.

Above: Clint Eastwood an honoree at the 2009 GQ Men of the Year party in Los Angeles, arrives with wife Dina at the event Wednesday, Nov. 18 2009.
Below: The magic team of Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman, with Los Angeles Lakers basketball player Kobe Bryant.