To say that Clint Eastwood is one of the most influential Hollywood stars and directors of all time would undersell the contributions of the star. From Westerns like Hang 'Em High to war movies like Kelly's Heroes, the star has been a symbol of American masculinity and stoic heroism since the 1960s. Looking at his most iconic characters and best films, it's not hard to see why multiple generations looked up to him as a genuine movie legend.
Clint Eastwood's career has seen him take on a variety of genres, but it's hard to deny his Western and action-thriller movies are his most iconic. Whether behind the camera or on the big screen, his films have given audiences a long line of hard-boiled heroes, skilled detectives and grizzled gunslingers. Ranging across genres, he has too many brilliant movies to count, but some are as close to perfect as it gets.
Clint Eastwood's career has seen him take on a variety of genres, but it's hard to deny his Western and action-thriller movies are his most iconic. Whether behind the camera or on the big screen, his films have given audiences a long line of hard-boiled heroes, skilled detectives and grizzled gunslingers. Ranging across genres, he has too many brilliant movies to count, but some are as close to perfect as it gets.
- 3/7/2025
- by Ashley Land
- Comic Book Resources
Since its creation, Western movies like Rio Bravo, Stagecoach, and The Searchershave explored a variety of timeless tropes that helped define and enrich the genre, with the "one-man army" being among the best. Long before the creation of the modern-day action genre, the Old West was a vehicle for action-adventure in cinema, entertaining millions of moviegoers for decades. While team-up movies can be fun, there's nothing quite as thrilling as seeing a lone gunslinger go against the odds and win.
Seeing heroes go against the odds can make for a great underdog story, something that's always been right at home in the Western genre. While team-up movies can be fun, nothing quite compares to watching a solo hero step up and do what's right when no one else will. From '50s classics to gritty '90s films, audiences have no shortage in the Western genre of one-man army heroes...
Seeing heroes go against the odds can make for a great underdog story, something that's always been right at home in the Western genre. While team-up movies can be fun, nothing quite compares to watching a solo hero step up and do what's right when no one else will. From '50s classics to gritty '90s films, audiences have no shortage in the Western genre of one-man army heroes...
- 2/16/2025
- by Ashley Land
- Comic Book Resources
After John Wayne, no star has established themselves as synonymous with the Western genre quite like Clint Eastwood, thanks to classics like Pale Rider and Hang 'Em High. Taking on a variety of roles in some of the most beloved revisionist Westerns ever made, he is primarily loved for his performance as Sergio Leone's Man With No Name. Typically affecting a mysterious and solitary persona, the character has no shortage of epic and dramatic scenes that show his character's prowess with a gun.
Clint Eastwood's Western movies have greatly elevated the genre, giving it some of its most successful, iconic, and influential characters. The actor almost always plays a man with unmatched skill with a revolver, allowing for everything from action-packed shootouts to slow-burn standoffs. Collaborating with a variety of brilliant directors and co-stars, few men can make a shootout as entertaining and dramatic as Eastwood.
Tuco and the...
Clint Eastwood's Western movies have greatly elevated the genre, giving it some of its most successful, iconic, and influential characters. The actor almost always plays a man with unmatched skill with a revolver, allowing for everything from action-packed shootouts to slow-burn standoffs. Collaborating with a variety of brilliant directors and co-stars, few men can make a shootout as entertaining and dramatic as Eastwood.
Tuco and the...
- 2/9/2025
- by Ashley Land
- Comic Book Resources
Western movies have seen a variety of talented actors build their careers through roles as cowboys, lawmen, and bounty hunters, but few have commanded the genre as well as Clint Eastwood. Building up an image as a gritty, self-reliant, and morally grey antihero, the actor/director has left as strong an impression behind the camera as in front. The image he established in the Western genre was so strong and beloved that it followed him through other genres, such as action, thriller, and drama.
Clint Eastwood's leadership of the Western genre throughout the latter half of the 20th century defined his career, rarely turning in a bad movie. As great as roles like Dirty Harry may be, the actor has always been at his best in the Old West -- and some films are a stronger testament to this than others. Ranging from performances as bounty hunters to vengeful spirits,...
Clint Eastwood's leadership of the Western genre throughout the latter half of the 20th century defined his career, rarely turning in a bad movie. As great as roles like Dirty Harry may be, the actor has always been at his best in the Old West -- and some films are a stronger testament to this than others. Ranging from performances as bounty hunters to vengeful spirits,...
- 2/4/2025
- by Ashley Land, Christopher Raley
- Comic Book Resources
In 1967, Clint Eastwood's career took off overnight with the U.S. theatrical releases of "A Fistful of Dollars," "For a Few Dollars More" and "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly." This trilogy of newfangled Spaghetti Westerns directed by the brilliant Sergio Leone transformed Eastwood from a TV cowboy (as Rowdy Yates on CBS' "Rawhide") to a gunslinging antihero. The genre was reborn, and Eastwood was suddenly John Wayne for the Baby Boomer generation. He expanded his range and bolstered his popularity the following year by genre-hopping from Western "Hang 'Em High" to cop flick "Coogan's Bluff" to World War II spy thriller "Where Eagles Dare." By the time 1969 rolled around, he could do just about anything — and he did the unexpected.
Though musicals and traditional Westerns were declining in popularity, Paramount thought it could give them both a jolt by mounting a big-screen adaptation of the popular Alan Jay Lerner...
Though musicals and traditional Westerns were declining in popularity, Paramount thought it could give them both a jolt by mounting a big-screen adaptation of the popular Alan Jay Lerner...
- 1/16/2025
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
In 1964, Clint Eastwood's career rose to prominence as he starred as the Man With No Name in Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western, A Fistful of Dollars, later returning for a complete trilogy. In the decades that followed, he established himself as Hollywood's leading action star, becoming a symbol of masculinity through roles like Dirty Harry and Josey Wales. Despite being known for relatively grounded stories, one of the star's best movies embraced the supernatural -- but he has never returned to it since.
When it comes to Clint Eastwood's career, both as an actor and director, grit and realism have been the norm. While his movies are often exaggerated takes on their genre, their stories are fairly rooted in reality, albeit requiring some suspension of disbelief at times. From the Man With No Name to Will Munny and Walt Kowalski, the actor increasingly became known for his gruff and gritty persona,...
When it comes to Clint Eastwood's career, both as an actor and director, grit and realism have been the norm. While his movies are often exaggerated takes on their genre, their stories are fairly rooted in reality, albeit requiring some suspension of disbelief at times. From the Man With No Name to Will Munny and Walt Kowalski, the actor increasingly became known for his gruff and gritty persona,...
- 1/5/2025
- by Ashley Land
- Comic Book Resources
Clint Eastwood's Best Picture-winning Western is getting a new streaming home. Since the 1960s, the American icon has been widely associated with the Western genre. He rose to fame for his roles as the ramrod Rowdy Yates in the Western television series Rawhide and the bounty hunter, the Man with No Name, in director Sergio Leone's Dollars trilogy of spaghetti Westerns, which includes A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.
Eastwood capped off the 1960s with the Westerns Hang 'Em High, which was his first starring role in an American movie, and the musical Paint Your Wagon. During the 1970s, Eastwood starred in Two Mules for Sister Sara and Joe Kidd before he began directing his own Westerns in addition to starring, starting with High Plains Drifter and followed by The Outlaw Josey Wales and Pale Rider. In 1992, Eastwood made Unforgiven,...
Eastwood capped off the 1960s with the Westerns Hang 'Em High, which was his first starring role in an American movie, and the musical Paint Your Wagon. During the 1970s, Eastwood starred in Two Mules for Sister Sara and Joe Kidd before he began directing his own Westerns in addition to starring, starting with High Plains Drifter and followed by The Outlaw Josey Wales and Pale Rider. In 1992, Eastwood made Unforgiven,...
- 12/31/2024
- by Adam Bentz
- ScreenRant
Clint Eastwood owes his career to Westerns. He became a familiar face to American television viewers between 1959 and 1965 as the ramrod Rowdy Yates in the popular CBS series "Rawhide" before venturing off to Spain, where, with Italian filmmaker Sergio Leone, he helped turn the genre on its ear with the Spaghetti Western trilogy of "A Fistful of Dollars," "For a Few Dollars More," and "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly." From that point forward, Eastwood in any kind of Western was a big deal at the box office, which was especially impressive considering that oaters were declining in popularity throughout the 1960s and into the '70s.
Ultimately, even Eastwood couldn't keep the genre afloat. After an impressive run that included "Hang 'Em High," "Two Mules for Sister Sara," "High Plains Drifter," and "The Outlaw Josey Wales," the star only made one proper Western in the 1980s ("Pale Rider...
Ultimately, even Eastwood couldn't keep the genre afloat. After an impressive run that included "Hang 'Em High," "Two Mules for Sister Sara," "High Plains Drifter," and "The Outlaw Josey Wales," the star only made one proper Western in the 1980s ("Pale Rider...
- 12/16/2024
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
With the exception of actor John Wayne and director John Ford, no other name is more synonymous with the Western than Clint Eastwood. The Outlaw Josey Wales, Hang 'em High, and the "Man with No Name" films by Sergio Leone, which included A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, are some of the most recognizable to fans of the genre. In 1992, Eastwood was both in front of and behind the camera for Unforgiven, a Western that not only featured a stacked cast with Morgan Freeman, Gene Hackman, and Richard Harris but also thrived on the lore of the "gunslinger story," while simultaneously deconstructing it.
If any individual could provide such a captivating narrative and deconstruction of the Western genre, it was Eastwood. He is most associated with portrayals of larger-than-life characters who have become legends in their own right. The...
If any individual could provide such a captivating narrative and deconstruction of the Western genre, it was Eastwood. He is most associated with portrayals of larger-than-life characters who have become legends in their own right. The...
- 11/24/2024
- by Jerome Reuter
- MovieWeb
During his post-Dollars Trilogy and pre-Dirty Harry era, Clint Eastwood starred in the revisionist Western drama, Hang 'Em High. In one of Eastwood's most underrated films, he portrays a retired lawman, Jed Cooper, who is wrongfully hung for a crime he didn't commit. The act puts Cooper on a ruthless path of vengeance against the men who tried to kill him. However, during Cooper's macabre pursuit of vengeance, he fails to find any peace or solace. It's time to take a deeper look at one of Eastwoods best films that would set the tone for his more renowned and celebrated entries in the Western genre.
- 11/9/2024
- by Jeffrey Harris
- Collider.com
Since rising to the status of A-list Hollywood icon after starring in Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy, Clint Eastwood has been the face of the Western genre. Taking over from an aging John Wayne, he cemented that status throughout the 1970s, thanks to films like High Plains Drifter, Hang 'Em High and Two Mules For Sister Sara. Throughout his career, Eastwood has both starred in and directed some of the greatest revisionist Westerns of all time, a sub-genre he basically perfected.
Eastwood's Western movies range from the supernatural to morally-complex character studies, exploring the violence and potential of life in the Old West. Ranging from action-heavy shootouts to explorations of the turmoil of the West, the actor's films also boast a variety of brilliant scenes. Thanks to his strong screen presence to his distinguished appearance, few stars have as many great scenes under their belt as Eastwood.
Pale Rider Features...
Eastwood's Western movies range from the supernatural to morally-complex character studies, exploring the violence and potential of life in the Old West. Ranging from action-heavy shootouts to explorations of the turmoil of the West, the actor's films also boast a variety of brilliant scenes. Thanks to his strong screen presence to his distinguished appearance, few stars have as many great scenes under their belt as Eastwood.
Pale Rider Features...
- 10/31/2024
- by Ashley Land
- Comic Book Resources
Your browser does not support the video tag. Quick Links Westerns Owe A Lot To Clint Eastwood Eastwood Changed The Western Early On How Unforgiven Challenged The Old West Mythos Bill Dagget Provides A Window Into The Old West Unforgiven Helped Change The Tone Of Modern Westerns Clint Eastwood Remains One of the Pillars of the Old Vanguard in Contemporary Cinema Unforgiven Left Its Mark On the Genre
Since his starring role in Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy, Clint Eastwood has been the face of the Western genre. Eastwood's career has spanned over 60 years. He's 94 years old and still as active as ever: the trailer for his upcoming movie Juror No. 2 has just come out. Taking over from John Wayne as the de facto mascot of the Old West in Hollywood, Eastwood starred in classics like The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Hang 'Em High, and The Outlaw Josey Wales.
Since his starring role in Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy, Clint Eastwood has been the face of the Western genre. Eastwood's career has spanned over 60 years. He's 94 years old and still as active as ever: the trailer for his upcoming movie Juror No. 2 has just come out. Taking over from John Wayne as the de facto mascot of the Old West in Hollywood, Eastwood starred in classics like The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Hang 'Em High, and The Outlaw Josey Wales.
- 10/8/2024
- by Ashley Land, Arthur Goyaz
- Comic Book Resources
Alan Hale, Jr. became a performer as part of his family's legacy. His mother was actress Gretchen Hartman who appeared in dozens of films in the 1910s, while his father, Alan Hale (real name: Rufus Edward MacKahan) racked up hundreds of credits in the silent era, typically as a reliable sidekick to Errol Flynn. Hartman retired from acting in 1929, and Hale, Sr. continued to work until his death in 1950. Alan Hale, Jr. first appeared on the screen as an infant, "starring" opposite his mother. Hale made his Broadway debut in 1931, when he was only 10, appearing in a very, very short-lived show called "Caught Wet" (it opened and closed in the same month). In 1933, Hale played uncredited role in William Wellman's Depression-era drama "Wild Boys of the Road," and it may be the first movie a casual observer would recognize him in.
Staring in 1941, Hale began his acting career in earnest,...
Staring in 1941, Hale began his acting career in earnest,...
- 9/28/2024
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
Alan Hale Jr. was a showbiz veteran before he could speak. The son of Alan Hale, a popular character actor best known for his portrayal of Little John in Michael Curtiz' classic "The Adventures of Robin Hood," Hale Jr. appeared in silent films as a baby and made a few war movies as a young man before serving in the United States Coast Guard during World War II. Once the war was over, Hale Jr. worked steadily in film and television, turning up on episodes of "Gunsmoke," "Mister Ed," and "Lassie" while landing supporting roles in movies starring John Wayne, Gregory Peck, and Randolph Scott.
Hale Jr. would be castigated as a nepobaby today, but while being literally born to the business didn't hurt his cause, he was a natural in front of the camera and a welcome presence in just about everything. So, it's no surprise that, after a difficult casting process,...
Hale Jr. would be castigated as a nepobaby today, but while being literally born to the business didn't hurt his cause, he was a natural in front of the camera and a welcome presence in just about everything. So, it's no surprise that, after a difficult casting process,...
- 9/18/2024
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
The Western genre has consistently delivered some of the best stories in Hollywood, with a long history of fantastic writers turning in its best tales. Like any genre of fiction, these films rely on a series of compelling tropes, which can contribute anything from character motivations to captivating endings. While not every creator puts these tropes to great use, when they're done well they surpass most genres of film, even serving as the basis for non-Western stories.
The Western genre has been defined and re-defined over the last century of cinema, with numerous directors, writers, and actors putting their own spin on these tropes. While some tropes can be incredibly hit or miss, others are almost expected to be used in Westerns, no matter the sub-genre. Tales from the Old West continue to be some of the most captivating adventures and journeys on screen, and mastery over the genre's best...
The Western genre has been defined and re-defined over the last century of cinema, with numerous directors, writers, and actors putting their own spin on these tropes. While some tropes can be incredibly hit or miss, others are almost expected to be used in Westerns, no matter the sub-genre. Tales from the Old West continue to be some of the most captivating adventures and journeys on screen, and mastery over the genre's best...
- 9/16/2024
- by Ashley Land
- Comic Book Resources
The genius of Clint Eastwood was not just limited to being an actor. Along with this, he also ventured into the territory of film direction. At the moment, Eastwood has 30 plus movies under his belt. While some did wonders at the box office, others did not so much. But even in the highs and lows of Hollywood, there is one movie that the legendary actor is most proud of.
Ken Watanabe and Clint Eastwood in Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) || Credits: Warner Bros.
The movie being 2006’s Letters from Iwo Jima, which was made as a companion to Flags of Our Fathers. Eastwood directed both films himself, but he takes greater pride in one over the other.
Clint Eastwood’s Most Significant Directorial Project
Clint Eastwood‘s debut movie Play Misty for Me was released in 1971, after which he delved deeper into the craft and created several well-acclaimed movies. This helped...
Ken Watanabe and Clint Eastwood in Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) || Credits: Warner Bros.
The movie being 2006’s Letters from Iwo Jima, which was made as a companion to Flags of Our Fathers. Eastwood directed both films himself, but he takes greater pride in one over the other.
Clint Eastwood’s Most Significant Directorial Project
Clint Eastwood‘s debut movie Play Misty for Me was released in 1971, after which he delved deeper into the craft and created several well-acclaimed movies. This helped...
- 9/8/2024
- by Sakshi Singh
- FandomWire
Clint Eastwood’s always been known for his unapologetic attitude, both on and off the screen. And when it comes to his Dirty Harry movies, he’s not about to change that. Critics may have taken issue with the ethical implications of the films, but Eastwood seems to have shrugged it all off with his signature coolness. Instead of getting bogged down in debates about morality, Eastwood focuses on what he does best: delivering gritty, pulse-pounding entertainment.
Clint Eastwood’s Harry throws away his police badge | Credits: Warner Bros.
So, while some may question the ethics behind Dirty Harry, Eastwood’s response is pretty clear—he’s here to make movies, not moral lessons. In the end, it’s this unflinching approach that keeps audiences coming back for more, decade after decade.
Clint Eastwood’s Rebel Spirit: How Dirty Harry and Escape from Alcatraz Defied Critics and Defined His Legacy...
Clint Eastwood’s Harry throws away his police badge | Credits: Warner Bros.
So, while some may question the ethics behind Dirty Harry, Eastwood’s response is pretty clear—he’s here to make movies, not moral lessons. In the end, it’s this unflinching approach that keeps audiences coming back for more, decade after decade.
Clint Eastwood’s Rebel Spirit: How Dirty Harry and Escape from Alcatraz Defied Critics and Defined His Legacy...
- 9/5/2024
- by Heena Singh
- FandomWire
Clint Eastwood’s rise to global stardom wasn’t exactly smooth sailing. Before becoming the icon he is renowned as today, the actor’s initial days in showbiz saw him working as a contract actor for Universal, which didn’t last long, as he was eventually fired for his Adam’s apple, which Universal claimed stuck out too far.
Clint Eastwood in a still from A Fistful of Dollars | Credit: United Artists
But the setback didn’t hold his career back for too long as he’d soon land his breakout role and later headlined the iconic Dollars trilogy. However, his success outside Hollywood did little to garner him roles when he returned.
Clint Eastwood’s Success Overseas Didn’t Get the Ball Rolling in Hollywood
After rising to prominence following his stint in the CBS hour-long western series Rawhide, which he wasn’t particularly fond of, the actor then...
Clint Eastwood in a still from A Fistful of Dollars | Credit: United Artists
But the setback didn’t hold his career back for too long as he’d soon land his breakout role and later headlined the iconic Dollars trilogy. However, his success outside Hollywood did little to garner him roles when he returned.
Clint Eastwood’s Success Overseas Didn’t Get the Ball Rolling in Hollywood
After rising to prominence following his stint in the CBS hour-long western series Rawhide, which he wasn’t particularly fond of, the actor then...
- 9/5/2024
- by Santanu Roy
- FandomWire
Is there a more iconic American actor than Clint Eastwood? Indeed, his name has been at the forefront of many discussions of the most influential and iconic actors on the screen. His career spans decades of content curated to his strong persona and clear artistic direction when behind the camera. Still, one genre that Eastwood has become synonymous with is the Western; both the starting point and the final farewell of his career have been steeped in the genre.
We will examine Eastwood's impact on the Western and outline how you can stream all of his movies in the genre online; what better way to celebrate the American icon?
How to Watch Every Clint Eastwood Western
The below lists every Western where Clint Eastwood had a prominent role. This excludes his early appearances in Star in the Dust and The First Traveling Saleslady, with an uncredited role in one and...
We will examine Eastwood's impact on the Western and outline how you can stream all of his movies in the genre online; what better way to celebrate the American icon?
How to Watch Every Clint Eastwood Western
The below lists every Western where Clint Eastwood had a prominent role. This excludes his early appearances in Star in the Dust and The First Traveling Saleslady, with an uncredited role in one and...
- 7/20/2024
- by Adam Symchuk
- MovieWeb
John Wayne's rejection of Lonesome Dove may have cost him a final classic, proving he should have accepted it. Wayne's refusal led to the acclaimed Lonesome Dove miniseries, featuring a stellar cast and emotional storytelling. Despite the decline of Westerns in the 1980s, Lonesome Dove became a standout, influencing a comeback in the genre.
The most acclaimed Western of the 1980s only came to pass because John Wayne originally turned it down. When Heaven's Gate bombed it killed Westerns during the 1980s, with the Michael Cimino epic barely taking in $4 million against its $44 million budget (via The Numbers). Of course, the genre had been fading with audiences for some time. Westerns used to be one of the biggest genres in Hollywood, but by the 1960s, younger audiences began to find them old-fashioned.
Clint Eastwood outings like A Fistful of Dollars or Hang 'Em High offered darker, more cynical takes that connected with audiences,...
The most acclaimed Western of the 1980s only came to pass because John Wayne originally turned it down. When Heaven's Gate bombed it killed Westerns during the 1980s, with the Michael Cimino epic barely taking in $4 million against its $44 million budget (via The Numbers). Of course, the genre had been fading with audiences for some time. Westerns used to be one of the biggest genres in Hollywood, but by the 1960s, younger audiences began to find them old-fashioned.
Clint Eastwood outings like A Fistful of Dollars or Hang 'Em High offered darker, more cynical takes that connected with audiences,...
- 7/14/2024
- by Padraig Cotter
- ScreenRant
Daniel Rudd is always creating. Whether on his solo project, Boy Hero, or on tour with Scene Queen as her guitarist, he is constantly taking inspiration from his surroundings and channeling it into new music or the next great performance. Amidst all of that, he finds plenty of time to stay absorbed in the anime and manga world. As it turns out, that is actually a primary catalyst in his musical output. So how does he do it? Read below to find out and also hear about how Asian Kung-fu Generation made him a better guitarist, his all-time favorites, and why he thinks anime and heavy music go so well together. Then go listen to his brand new EP! I know you have been on the road a lot recently. I was wondering if you had any chance to watch any anime on the plane? And if you did, what were you watching?...
- 7/2/2024
- by Alex Lebl
- Crunchyroll
Amazon Prime Video is the place to go for movies this month, with a plethora of original films as well as new library additions for just about every movie fan. The Emma Roberts-led original Space Cadet hits the streaming service aptly on the Fourth of July, for anyone looking for a fish-out-of-water style comedy. My Spy the Eternal City, the newest film in the Dave Bautista-led family action series also drops on July 18.
Action film fans are also in for a treat with recent films The Beekeeper and Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning coming to Prime Video in July.
As far as TV shows go, the most notable addition this month is the adult animated series Sausage Party: Foodtopia, a continuation of the 2016 film Sausage Party.
Here’s everything coming to Prime Video and Freevee in July – Amazon originals are designated with an asterisk.
New on Amazon Prime Video...
Action film fans are also in for a treat with recent films The Beekeeper and Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning coming to Prime Video in July.
As far as TV shows go, the most notable addition this month is the adult animated series Sausage Party: Foodtopia, a continuation of the 2016 film Sausage Party.
Here’s everything coming to Prime Video and Freevee in July – Amazon originals are designated with an asterisk.
New on Amazon Prime Video...
- 7/1/2024
- by Brynnaarens
- Den of Geek
Clint Eastwood's "Two Mules for Sister Sara" is a lesser-known, humorous Western. The film features Eastwood and Shirley MacLaine as a comedic duo in a story filled with zingers and quips. Although not a major hit, "Two Mules for Sister Sara" marked a turning point in Eastwood's career, showcasing his versatility and willingness to share screen time.
One of Clint Eastwood's least talked about Westerns is also his funniest outing in the genre. Eastwood spent years on Western series Rawhide, before accidentally becoming a screen icon when he signed on for a low-budget Italian film called A Fistful of Dollars. This 1964 movie redefined the genre, and set the template for the Spaghetti Westerns that followed. Eastwood exited Sergio Leone's Dollars trilogy as an exciting new leading man, and became one of the last movie stars to make his name with Westerns.
Throughout his American movies in the 1960s and 1970s,...
One of Clint Eastwood's least talked about Westerns is also his funniest outing in the genre. Eastwood spent years on Western series Rawhide, before accidentally becoming a screen icon when he signed on for a low-budget Italian film called A Fistful of Dollars. This 1964 movie redefined the genre, and set the template for the Spaghetti Westerns that followed. Eastwood exited Sergio Leone's Dollars trilogy as an exciting new leading man, and became one of the last movie stars to make his name with Westerns.
Throughout his American movies in the 1960s and 1970s,...
- 6/30/2024
- by Padraig Cotter
- ScreenRant
This July, beat the heat with the latest additions at Prime Video and Freevee!
It’s a light month for original series, films, and specials as we head into the summer lull, but there is still plenty to watch throughout the month: over 140 classic films between the two Amazon streamers will be added this month, from horrors such as the genre-changing “The Silence Of The Lambs” and last year’s newest “Evil Dead” franchise installment “Evil Dead Rise,” the first five films of the “Rocky” franchise, and comedies like “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “Animal House,” “13 Going On 30,” and much, much more.
But after the majority of the film load drops on July 1, don’t forget to head back to the services’ additions throughout the month, including Season 2 of the critically acclaimed “Troppo,” the new “Legally Blonde“-like comedy “Space Cadet,” and a new documentary from award-winning documentary filmmaker Dawn Porter,...
It’s a light month for original series, films, and specials as we head into the summer lull, but there is still plenty to watch throughout the month: over 140 classic films between the two Amazon streamers will be added this month, from horrors such as the genre-changing “The Silence Of The Lambs” and last year’s newest “Evil Dead” franchise installment “Evil Dead Rise,” the first five films of the “Rocky” franchise, and comedies like “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “Animal House,” “13 Going On 30,” and much, much more.
But after the majority of the film load drops on July 1, don’t forget to head back to the services’ additions throughout the month, including Season 2 of the critically acclaimed “Troppo,” the new “Legally Blonde“-like comedy “Space Cadet,” and a new documentary from award-winning documentary filmmaker Dawn Porter,...
- 6/28/2024
- by Ashley Steves
- The Streamable
The best villains in Clint Eastwood's Western movies are as memorable and essential as his iconic heroes. Eastwood's characters often operated in morally gray territory, reflecting the lawless nature of the Western genre. Great Western villains must be nuanced in their motivations and actions, with some being downright evil in their pursuit of power.
Clint Eastwood is widely regarded as one of the most prolific actors within the Western genre, but the best villains in his movies should not go unacknowledged. A hero has no reason to exist without an antagonist who provides a foil to their sense of morality. Eastwood appeared in many Westerns, but the best stand out because of the great performances and characterization of the evils that he fought against. After making so many iconic Western movies, it’s only fitting that his villains be regarded with the same notoriety.
A great villain should...
Clint Eastwood is widely regarded as one of the most prolific actors within the Western genre, but the best villains in his movies should not go unacknowledged. A hero has no reason to exist without an antagonist who provides a foil to their sense of morality. Eastwood appeared in many Westerns, but the best stand out because of the great performances and characterization of the evils that he fought against. After making so many iconic Western movies, it’s only fitting that his villains be regarded with the same notoriety.
A great villain should...
- 3/3/2024
- by Mary Kassel
- ScreenRant
Clint Eastwood's portrayal of Pardner in Paint Your Wagon showcases his versatility as he steps outside his stoic persona and embraces the Western musical genre with comedic timing and impressive singing. In Joe Kidd, Eastwood's performance as the titular character combines intensity with honor and moral complexity, elevating the film and showcasing his charisma and unwavering grit. As Marshal Jed Cooper in Hang 'Em High, Eastwood captivates with his portrayal of a resilient lawman seeking justice, breathing defiant life into a timeless tale and embodying courage and toughness on the frontier.
Over decades, Clint Eastwood has become synonymous with the iconic cowboy figure in classic Westerns. Portraying a multitude of remarkable characters, the majority of which have enhanced the quality of great Western films. As one of Hollywood's most legendary stars, Eastwood's name brings to mind the image of the stoic, rugged cowboy - the very embodiment of the Western genre.
Over decades, Clint Eastwood has become synonymous with the iconic cowboy figure in classic Westerns. Portraying a multitude of remarkable characters, the majority of which have enhanced the quality of great Western films. As one of Hollywood's most legendary stars, Eastwood's name brings to mind the image of the stoic, rugged cowboy - the very embodiment of the Western genre.
- 1/27/2024
- by Kayla Turner
- ScreenRant
Bruce Dern has been turning in wonderful performances since the early 1970s. He rose to prominence during the New Hollywood era, with a string of intense and realistic performances in movies like Hang 'Em High and The Cowboys before branching out into more diverse roles. He received a late-career boost with 2013's Nebraska, which earned him an Oscar nomination and the Best Actor award at Cannes.
- 1/18/2024
- by Luc Haasbroek
- Collider.com
Clint Eastwood's Westerns were darker and more cynical than the traditional Hollywood Golden Era Westerns, featuring morally ambiguous anti-heroes. The films "The Ox-Bow Incident" and "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" are two of Eastwood's favorite movies and had a significant influence on his own work. These films introduced Eastwood to the idea that movies could explore weighty topics and feature unlikeable main characters, which he incorporated into his own Westerns.
Two of Clint Eastwood's favorite Westerns had a big impact on his own work in the genre. The Western genre was waning in popularity by the time Eastwood became a movie star in the 1960s, but his work in the Dollars movie trilogy or Hang 'Em High helped keep "Oaters" alive in the years that followed. Clint Eastwood Westerns were also darker and more cynical than the kind produced during Hollywood's Golden Era, where the heroes played by...
Two of Clint Eastwood's favorite Westerns had a big impact on his own work in the genre. The Western genre was waning in popularity by the time Eastwood became a movie star in the 1960s, but his work in the Dollars movie trilogy or Hang 'Em High helped keep "Oaters" alive in the years that followed. Clint Eastwood Westerns were also darker and more cynical than the kind produced during Hollywood's Golden Era, where the heroes played by...
- 10/21/2023
- by Padraig Cotter
- ScreenRant
Clint Eastwood's Western movies showcase his ability to be cool and collected while taking out the bad guys. (136 characters) Some of Clint Eastwood's Western movies focus more on reflection and the cowboy's plights, but still feature exciting kills. (139 characters) Clint Eastwood's best kills in Westerns range from impressive and dramatic to satisfyingly intense and iconic. (119 characters)
Over the course of his incredible career, Clint Eastwood has starred in some truly iconic Western movies, and in these movies, there have been some especially awesome death scenes. From the Dollars trilogy to Unforgiven, Eastwood has astounded audiences with his ability to be cool and collected while also taking out the bad guys. Through these kills, Eastwood proved that he was just as capable of a cowboy as any other Western movie great. The following list shows off some of his best moments with his top ten greatest kills in Westerns.
Clint...
Over the course of his incredible career, Clint Eastwood has starred in some truly iconic Western movies, and in these movies, there have been some especially awesome death scenes. From the Dollars trilogy to Unforgiven, Eastwood has astounded audiences with his ability to be cool and collected while also taking out the bad guys. Through these kills, Eastwood proved that he was just as capable of a cowboy as any other Western movie great. The following list shows off some of his best moments with his top ten greatest kills in Westerns.
Clint...
- 9/17/2023
- by Megan Hemenway
- ScreenRant
Clint Eastwood's Western movies were darker and more cynical than those made during the "Golden Age" of Hollywood, which might explain why John Wayne wasn't a fan. John Wayne's final movie, The Shootist, almost starred Clint Eastwood, but other actors were considered due to Wayne's declining health. Wayne had a confrontation with the director on the set of The Shootist, refusing to film a scene where his character shot someone in the back, stating he had never done that in his career. Where to Watch Powered by
Clint Eastwood passed on a Western movie role that went on to feature one of John Wayne's best performances. While Westerns were once one of the most dominant genres in Hollywood, they waned greatly in popularity during the 1960s. Eastwood was one of the last movie stars to make his name off the genre, thanks to the success of Sergio Leone's...
Clint Eastwood passed on a Western movie role that went on to feature one of John Wayne's best performances. While Westerns were once one of the most dominant genres in Hollywood, they waned greatly in popularity during the 1960s. Eastwood was one of the last movie stars to make his name off the genre, thanks to the success of Sergio Leone's...
- 8/5/2023
- by Padraig Cotter
- ScreenRant
Before Clint Eastwood took on his first Hollywood leading man role in Hang 'Em High, he passed on a much bigger Western. Eastwood considered quitting the film business entirely towards the end of the '50s, but landing the part of Rowdy Yates on Rawhide convinced him to stay the course. It was during his run on the show that he was offered a low-budget Italian Western that was eventually released as A Fistful Of Dollars. The film was a shock success and revitalized the ailing genre.
Sergio Leone's Dollars trilogy made Eastwood a screen icon, but he had to be careful making his transition to lead roles in American films. He co-starred with Richard Burton in World War 2 adventure Where Eagle's Dare and lead several other films, but it was the success of Dirty Harry that truly made him a movie star. Nestled in between this period was Eastwood's first Hollywood lead,...
Sergio Leone's Dollars trilogy made Eastwood a screen icon, but he had to be careful making his transition to lead roles in American films. He co-starred with Richard Burton in World War 2 adventure Where Eagle's Dare and lead several other films, but it was the success of Dirty Harry that truly made him a movie star. Nestled in between this period was Eastwood's first Hollywood lead,...
- 4/15/2023
- by Padraig Cotter
- ScreenRant
It's odd to think that there was a time when Clint Eastwood was just a jobbing actor and not the Hollywood legend we know him to be. As an actor and a director, the man has had a career that anyone looking for success in the film industry would envy, being able to make whatever he wanted to make consistently for decades.
Though he's tackled crime stories, romantic melodramas, biopics, and just about everything else you could in the business, we all know Clint Eastwood's bread and butter is the Western, the genre that rocketed him to stardom in the 1960s with the release of Sergio Leone's classic Spaghetti Western "Dollars" trilogy, all three of which hit American movie screens in 1967.
Prior to heading over to Italy to take on the Man with No Name character, Eastwood was the co-star of the television series "Rawhide" for eight years, and...
Though he's tackled crime stories, romantic melodramas, biopics, and just about everything else you could in the business, we all know Clint Eastwood's bread and butter is the Western, the genre that rocketed him to stardom in the 1960s with the release of Sergio Leone's classic Spaghetti Western "Dollars" trilogy, all three of which hit American movie screens in 1967.
Prior to heading over to Italy to take on the Man with No Name character, Eastwood was the co-star of the television series "Rawhide" for eight years, and...
- 4/8/2023
- by Mike Shutt
- Slash Film
Oscar-winning actor and filmmaker, Clint Eastwood, has been one of Hollywood's top leading men since the 1960s starring in classics such as Hang 'Em High, Dirty Harry and Escape from Alcatraz. Eastwood got his first big break on the Old West series, Rawhide and after the success of Italian Spaghetti Westerns like The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Eastwood solidified himself as one of the greatest Western stars.
- 3/13/2023
- by Andrea Ciriaco
- Collider.com
The ending of Dirty Harry is a perfect note to close on - but Clint Eastwood himself very nearly ruined it. Eastwood made his name with Westerns such as the Dollars trilogy or Hang 'Em High, but by the end of the '60s, it was clear the genre was dying. After stars like Paul Newman, Frank Sinatra and John Wayne passed on Dirty Harry, Eastwood signed on as the titular character. Not only was it a huge success upon release in 1971, it essentially underlined that cop movies had replaced the Western for audiences.
While Harry's uncompromising approach to law enforcement spoke to many viewers, the film was labeled fascist in its views by several prominent critics like Pauline Kael. These critiques were so loud that the first sequel - 1973's Magnum Force - set Eastwood's character against a gang of vigilante police officers just to underline that the original wasn't endorsing "Dirty" Harry's actions.
While Harry's uncompromising approach to law enforcement spoke to many viewers, the film was labeled fascist in its views by several prominent critics like Pauline Kael. These critiques were so loud that the first sequel - 1973's Magnum Force - set Eastwood's character against a gang of vigilante police officers just to underline that the original wasn't endorsing "Dirty" Harry's actions.
- 3/4/2023
- by Padraig Cotter
- ScreenRant
Jack Ging, an actor who had more than 50 film and television roles from the 1950s through the 1990s, died Sept. 9 at his home in La Quinta, Calilf. No cause was given
Ging was best known as General Harlan “Bull” Fulbright on NBC’s The A-Team, and was a recurring character as Lt. Dan Ives in the detective show Mannix in the 1960s. He was also known for a supporting role in the final season of Tales of Wells Fargo, starring Dale Robertson.
Born to farmers in Oklahoma, he served in the US Marine Corps for four years and was honorably discharged. He went on to play college football at the University of Oklahoma, scoring five touchdowns during his career there and appeared with the team in the 1954 Orange Bowl. He later played briefly for the Edmonton Eskimos in the Canadian Football League.
Film credits included the Clint Eastwood films Sniper’s Ridge,...
Ging was best known as General Harlan “Bull” Fulbright on NBC’s The A-Team, and was a recurring character as Lt. Dan Ives in the detective show Mannix in the 1960s. He was also known for a supporting role in the final season of Tales of Wells Fargo, starring Dale Robertson.
Born to farmers in Oklahoma, he served in the US Marine Corps for four years and was honorably discharged. He went on to play college football at the University of Oklahoma, scoring five touchdowns during his career there and appeared with the team in the 1954 Orange Bowl. He later played briefly for the Edmonton Eskimos in the Canadian Football League.
Film credits included the Clint Eastwood films Sniper’s Ridge,...
- 9/12/2022
- by Bruce Haring
- Deadline Film + TV
Click here to read the full article.
Jack Ging, the familiar character actor who recurred on such series as Tales of Wells Fargo, Mannix, Riptide and The A-Team and appeared in three films opposite Clint Eastwood, has died. He was 90.
Ging died Friday of natural causes at his home in La Quinta, California, his wife, Apache Ging, told The Hollywood Reporter.
In rare starring turns, Ging played the love interest of Diane Baker’s character in a remake of Tess of the Storm Country (1960), a soldier and reluctant hero in the waning days of the Korean War in the drama Sniper’s Ridge (1961) and a clinical psychiatrist on the 1962-64 NBC medical series The Eleventh Hour.
Alongside Eastwood, Ging portrayed a marshal in Hang ‘Em High (1968), a doctor in Play Misty for Me (1971) and Morgan Allen, the mine owner (and lover of Marianna Hill’s character), in High Plains Drifter...
Jack Ging, the familiar character actor who recurred on such series as Tales of Wells Fargo, Mannix, Riptide and The A-Team and appeared in three films opposite Clint Eastwood, has died. He was 90.
Ging died Friday of natural causes at his home in La Quinta, California, his wife, Apache Ging, told The Hollywood Reporter.
In rare starring turns, Ging played the love interest of Diane Baker’s character in a remake of Tess of the Storm Country (1960), a soldier and reluctant hero in the waning days of the Korean War in the drama Sniper’s Ridge (1961) and a clinical psychiatrist on the 1962-64 NBC medical series The Eleventh Hour.
Alongside Eastwood, Ging portrayed a marshal in Hang ‘Em High (1968), a doctor in Play Misty for Me (1971) and Morgan Allen, the mine owner (and lover of Marianna Hill’s character), in High Plains Drifter...
- 9/12/2022
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
My Chemical Romance formed on September 12, 2001. The date was no accident: They’ve long credited their formation to the events that happened on 9/11. Singer Gerard Way was working at Cartoon Network in New York City and experienced the aftermath firsthand, inspiring him to create something that could change the world for the better.
Twenty-one years later on Sunday night, My Chemical Romance took the stage at Barclays Center. Fans have been anticipating this reunion: After a 12-year run, they had split in 2013 to pursue other projects. Then, in 2017, they came together privately,...
Twenty-one years later on Sunday night, My Chemical Romance took the stage at Barclays Center. Fans have been anticipating this reunion: After a 12-year run, they had split in 2013 to pursue other projects. Then, in 2017, they came together privately,...
- 9/12/2022
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
On paper, Clint Eastwood seems to have enjoyed a well plotted out career. In the early 1960s, he made himself known to American television viewers via his role as Rowdy Yates on "Rawhide." From there, he segued to the newfangled Spaghetti Westerns of Sergio Leone as the laconic "Man with No Name" in the "Dollars Trilogy." As conventional Westerns faded out of fashion, Eastwood made violent, anti-mythic oaters like "Hang 'Em High" and "The Outlaw Josey Wales," while adopting the persona of Dirty Harry Callahan in a series of cop flicks that both capitalized on and tweaked the country's law-and-order fervor. Then, after a few stumbles in the late 1980s, Eastwood went full-on revisionist with "Unforgiven," at which point he became a perennial Oscar darling.
Amazingly, Eastwood is still plugging away at 92. That kind of career longevity isn't just rare, it's just about unprecedented. Only Portuguese filmmaker Manoel de Oliveira,...
Amazingly, Eastwood is still plugging away at 92. That kind of career longevity isn't just rare, it's just about unprecedented. Only Portuguese filmmaker Manoel de Oliveira,...
- 9/5/2022
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
1971 was hands-down the most important year of Clint Eastwood's career. Having solidified his movie star status via Sergio Leone's "Dollars Trilogy", Eastwood was spinning his wheels a bit as he segued into the next chapter of his career. He'd enjoyed huge commercial successes in the late-1960s with "Hang 'Em High" and "Where Eagles Dare" and even the misbegotten musical "Paint Your Wagon," but these films all felt like more of the same. Eastwood could tread water for a few more...
The post Clint Eastwood Took A Major Pay Cut To Get His First Directing Gig appeared first on /Film.
The post Clint Eastwood Took A Major Pay Cut To Get His First Directing Gig appeared first on /Film.
- 7/11/2022
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
Arlene Golonka, best known for her portrayal of waitress Millie on the classic CBS sitcom The Andy Griffith Show and its spinoff Mayberry R.F.D., died Monday at a West Hollywood memory care facility following a battle with Alzheimer’s. She was 85.
Her death was announced by her friend, the literary agent Cary Kozlov.
Golonka, who made her Broadway debut in 1958’s short-lived The Night Circus before landing stage roles in 1962’s Come Blow Your Horn and 1963’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, already had made numerous appearances on television prior to her breakthrough role on The Andy Griffith Show in 1967, among them Car 54, Where Are You?, The Doctors, The Flying Nun and The Big Valley.
She made her first Griffith appearance on Oct. 16, 1967, in an episode that introduced her as Millie Hutchins, initially intended as a love interest for bookish bachelor Howard Sprague (played by Jack Dodson...
Her death was announced by her friend, the literary agent Cary Kozlov.
Golonka, who made her Broadway debut in 1958’s short-lived The Night Circus before landing stage roles in 1962’s Come Blow Your Horn and 1963’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, already had made numerous appearances on television prior to her breakthrough role on The Andy Griffith Show in 1967, among them Car 54, Where Are You?, The Doctors, The Flying Nun and The Big Valley.
She made her first Griffith appearance on Oct. 16, 1967, in an episode that introduced her as Millie Hutchins, initially intended as a love interest for bookish bachelor Howard Sprague (played by Jack Dodson...
- 6/1/2021
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
Arlene Golonka, a veteran character actor best known for playing Millie Swanson on “Mayberry R.F.D.,” died Monday in West Hollywood, Calif. She was 85.
Her niece Stephanie Morton, said she had been suffering from Alzheimer’s.
“She lived and breathed being an artist, being an actress was who she was born to be,” said her niece, “She was a very wise woman who I was lucky to call my aunt.”
“She loved to teach,” said Morton, who said her acting students over the years included Halle Berry.
With a career spanning over 45 years, Golonka played recurring roles on “The Doctors,” “Joe & Valerie” and “1st & 10” and appeared in episodes of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “M*A*S*H” and “The King of Queens.” On “The Andy Griffith Show,” Golonka played Millie Hutchins, the girlfriend of Sam Jones (Ken Berry) on two episodes, and she reprised the role as Millie Swanson on “Mayberry R.F.D.” across 34 episodes.
Her niece Stephanie Morton, said she had been suffering from Alzheimer’s.
“She lived and breathed being an artist, being an actress was who she was born to be,” said her niece, “She was a very wise woman who I was lucky to call my aunt.”
“She loved to teach,” said Morton, who said her acting students over the years included Halle Berry.
With a career spanning over 45 years, Golonka played recurring roles on “The Doctors,” “Joe & Valerie” and “1st & 10” and appeared in episodes of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “M*A*S*H” and “The King of Queens.” On “The Andy Griffith Show,” Golonka played Millie Hutchins, the girlfriend of Sam Jones (Ken Berry) on two episodes, and she reprised the role as Millie Swanson on “Mayberry R.F.D.” across 34 episodes.
- 6/1/2021
- by Ethan Shanfeld
- Variety Film + TV
The Son season 2 opens with a couple of close shaves in "Numunuu."
This The Son review contains spoilers.
The Son Season 2 Episode 1
The Son episode 1, " Numunuu," establishes season 2 immediately. The setting is a Mexican chain gang roadside dig where one gringo stands out. He doesn't look particularly special, but the vehicle that comes to pick him out of the line looks very important. The first we see of Eli McCullough (Pierce Brosnan) is the boots. His spurs may not be jingle jangle jingling, but the First Son of Texas rides merrily along. He bribes a federale and retains his son, Pete (Henry Garrett). It is a muted reunion, given the circumstances.
Pete's got a lot to hide. He abandoned his family to run off across the border with María García (Paola Núñez) after his family slaughtered hers in an old fashion Texas land grab. He took off his ring and...
This The Son review contains spoilers.
The Son Season 2 Episode 1
The Son episode 1, " Numunuu," establishes season 2 immediately. The setting is a Mexican chain gang roadside dig where one gringo stands out. He doesn't look particularly special, but the vehicle that comes to pick him out of the line looks very important. The first we see of Eli McCullough (Pierce Brosnan) is the boots. His spurs may not be jingle jangle jingling, but the First Son of Texas rides merrily along. He bribes a federale and retains his son, Pete (Henry Garrett). It is a muted reunion, given the circumstances.
Pete's got a lot to hide. He abandoned his family to run off across the border with María García (Paola Núñez) after his family slaughtered hers in an old fashion Texas land grab. He took off his ring and...
- 4/24/2019
- Den of Geek
Joseph Sirola, the genial actor and Tony Award-winning producer who was known as "The King of the Voice-Overs," has died. He was 89.
Sirola died of complications from respiratory failure Sunday at a rehabilitation hospital in New York City, his longtime companion, Claire Gozzo, said.
On the big screen, Sirola appeared in Strange Bedfellows (1965) opposite Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida; in George Stevens' The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965); with Clint Eastwood in Hang 'Em High (1968); and in The Super Cops (1974), directed by Gordon Parks.
Sirola portrayed bandleader Freddy Fleet on a season-three episode ...
Sirola died of complications from respiratory failure Sunday at a rehabilitation hospital in New York City, his longtime companion, Claire Gozzo, said.
On the big screen, Sirola appeared in Strange Bedfellows (1965) opposite Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida; in George Stevens' The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965); with Clint Eastwood in Hang 'Em High (1968); and in The Super Cops (1974), directed by Gordon Parks.
Sirola portrayed bandleader Freddy Fleet on a season-three episode ...
- 2/10/2019
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Joseph Sirola, the genial actor and Tony Award-winning producer who was known as "The King of the Voice-Overs," has died. He was 89.
Sirola died of complications from respiratory failure Sunday at a rehabilitation hospital in New York City, his longtime companion, Claire Gozzo, said.
On the big screen, Sirola appeared in Strange Bedfellows (1965) opposite Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida; in George Stevens' The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965); with Clint Eastwood in Hang 'Em High (1968); and in The Super Cops (1974), directed by Gordon Parks.
Sirola portrayed bandleader Freddy Fleet on a season-three episode ...
Sirola died of complications from respiratory failure Sunday at a rehabilitation hospital in New York City, his longtime companion, Claire Gozzo, said.
On the big screen, Sirola appeared in Strange Bedfellows (1965) opposite Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida; in George Stevens' The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965); with Clint Eastwood in Hang 'Em High (1968); and in The Super Cops (1974), directed by Gordon Parks.
Sirola portrayed bandleader Freddy Fleet on a season-three episode ...
- 2/10/2019
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Writer-director Sergio Sollima gives us one of the best 'political' Italo westerns from the pre- May '68 era... with two top stars in great form, Gian Maria Volontè and Tomas Milian. This two-disc German import has both the long and short versions of the movie in HD, with full language options for each. Face to Face (Faccia a faccia; Von Angesicht zu Angesicht) Region A+B Blu-ray Explosive Media (Alive) 1967 / Color / 2:35 widescreen / 93, 112 min. / Street Date April 29, 2016 / available at Amazon.de / E 21,93 Starring Gian Maria Volontè, Tomas Milian, William Berger, Jolanda Modio, Gianni Rizzo, Carole André Ángel del Pozo, Aldo Sambrell, Antonio Casas, Lidia Alfonsi, John Karlsen, Gastone Moschin, G&eacutge;rard Tichy. Cinematography Raphael Pacheco Film Editor Eugenio Alabiso Original Music Ennio Morricone Art Direction and sets Carlo Simi Written by Sergio Donati, Sergio Sollima Produced by Arturo González, Alberto Grimaldi <Directed by Sergio Sollima
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Wow,...
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Wow,...
- 10/4/2016
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Jonathan Goldsmith -- best known as "The Most Interesting Man in the World" until yesterday -- is staying thirsty ... for bigger, better gigs. Dos Equis announced it was retiring the famous commercial character on Wednesday, and Goldsmith tells TMZ ... he immediately got his management team on the horn to relaunch his film and TV career. Goldsmith's been with Dos Equis for 9 years, but before that he was a very successful working actor ... starring in movies...
- 3/10/2016
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Strictly Come Dancing was Saturday's most-watched show, peaking with more than 9 million viewers.
Strictly Come Dancing's Movie Week was viewed by an average audience of 8.65 million (39.2%) from 6.30pm, compared with 7.2 million (31.3%) for The X Factor from 7.30pm.
Strictly Come Dancing poll: Who is your dancefloor star from Movie Week?
The X Factor peaked with 8.03 million (34.7%) at 8.45pm, while Strictly Come Dancing peaked with 9.23 million (39.5%) an hour earlier.
BBC One also scored a ratings success with Doctor Who, which entertained an average audience of 5.08 million (22.1%) at 8.30pm.
Elsewhere on BBC One, Casualty played to 4.33 million (21.5%) at 9.35pm, while a repeat of Mrs Brown's Boys closed the night with 2.67 million (19.3%) at 10.45pm.
X Factor week 1 poll: Who's your early favourite for glory?
Back on ITV, The Chase: Celebrity Special was seen by 2.82 million (14.1%) from 6.30pm, while 2.93 (17.5%) tuned in to watch Through the Keyhole at 10pm.
Dad's Army was BBC Two...
Strictly Come Dancing's Movie Week was viewed by an average audience of 8.65 million (39.2%) from 6.30pm, compared with 7.2 million (31.3%) for The X Factor from 7.30pm.
Strictly Come Dancing poll: Who is your dancefloor star from Movie Week?
The X Factor peaked with 8.03 million (34.7%) at 8.45pm, while Strictly Come Dancing peaked with 9.23 million (39.5%) an hour earlier.
BBC One also scored a ratings success with Doctor Who, which entertained an average audience of 5.08 million (22.1%) at 8.30pm.
Elsewhere on BBC One, Casualty played to 4.33 million (21.5%) at 9.35pm, while a repeat of Mrs Brown's Boys closed the night with 2.67 million (19.3%) at 10.45pm.
X Factor week 1 poll: Who's your early favourite for glory?
Back on ITV, The Chase: Celebrity Special was seen by 2.82 million (14.1%) from 6.30pm, while 2.93 (17.5%) tuned in to watch Through the Keyhole at 10pm.
Dad's Army was BBC Two...
- 10/12/2014
- Digital Spy
Check out this unearthed 1977 letter from Clint Eastwood to film critic Andrew Sarris, wherein Eastwood thanks Sarris for his Village Voice article on the "Dirty Harry" franchise, titled "Is Harry Too Dirty?" Eastwood gets to expound on the perceived messages in his films, complaining that ones with anti-capital punishment agendas like "Hang 'Em High" got little media attention, while vigilante crime classic "Dirty Harry" and its sequels -- which are about, in his words, "concern for the victim" -- results in Pauline Kael calling "fascism." By February of '77, three of the five Dirty Harry films would have come out -- 1971's "Dirty Harry," 1973's "Magnum Force" and 1976's "The Enforcer."...
- 2/13/2014
- by Beth Hanna
- Thompson on Hollywood
Influential figure in Clint Eastwood's career who directed Magnum Force and Hang 'em High
It is no exaggeration to declare that the film and television director Ted Post, who has died aged 95, contributed greatly to the making of Clint Eastwood into a Hollywood superstar. When Eastwood returned to the Us from Europe, where he had starred in three Sergio Leone "spaghetti" westerns, Post directed him in Hang 'em High (1968), which consolidated Eastwood's screen persona as the impassive, laconic, gun-for-hire loner. A few years later, Post directed Eastwood again, in Magnum Force (1973), the first Dirty Harry sequel, which outdid Don Siegel's original film commercially. Eastwood said that Leone, Siegel and Post were the three most influential directors in his career.
In 1959, the unknown Eastwood – who had appeared in bit parts in 11 films – moved to CBS for his first leading role, as the amiable fresh-faced sidekick Rowdy Yates, in the television western series Rawhide.
It is no exaggeration to declare that the film and television director Ted Post, who has died aged 95, contributed greatly to the making of Clint Eastwood into a Hollywood superstar. When Eastwood returned to the Us from Europe, where he had starred in three Sergio Leone "spaghetti" westerns, Post directed him in Hang 'em High (1968), which consolidated Eastwood's screen persona as the impassive, laconic, gun-for-hire loner. A few years later, Post directed Eastwood again, in Magnum Force (1973), the first Dirty Harry sequel, which outdid Don Siegel's original film commercially. Eastwood said that Leone, Siegel and Post were the three most influential directors in his career.
In 1959, the unknown Eastwood – who had appeared in bit parts in 11 films – moved to CBS for his first leading role, as the amiable fresh-faced sidekick Rowdy Yates, in the television western series Rawhide.
- 8/25/2013
- by Ronald Bergan
- The Guardian - Film News
Prolific TV and film director Ted Post has died at the age of 95.
Although Post had his hand in a number of genres, he's perhaps most famous for his work on Westerns like "The Peacemaker," "Hang 'Em High" and "Rawhide" with Clint Eastwood, "Gunsmoke," and "Stagecoach." He also directed Eastwood (pictured above on set) in the "Dirty Harry" sequel "Magnum Force." Eastwood and Post didn't collaborate after that due to various disagreements.
Post also helmed the sequel "Beneath the Planet of the Apes," the pilot for "Cagney and Lacey," and more than a few episodes of "Peyton Place." Some of his more outré offerings include freaky horror exploitation flick "The Baby," "The Harrad Experiment" about swingin' sexual experimentation, and the Chuck Norris actioner "Good Guys Wear Black."
Post's legacy includes Pro Bono Productions, the nonprofit he started in 1996 to elevate the profiles of older actors in show business. "Our industry...
Although Post had his hand in a number of genres, he's perhaps most famous for his work on Westerns like "The Peacemaker," "Hang 'Em High" and "Rawhide" with Clint Eastwood, "Gunsmoke," and "Stagecoach." He also directed Eastwood (pictured above on set) in the "Dirty Harry" sequel "Magnum Force." Eastwood and Post didn't collaborate after that due to various disagreements.
Post also helmed the sequel "Beneath the Planet of the Apes," the pilot for "Cagney and Lacey," and more than a few episodes of "Peyton Place." Some of his more outré offerings include freaky horror exploitation flick "The Baby," "The Harrad Experiment" about swingin' sexual experimentation, and the Chuck Norris actioner "Good Guys Wear Black."
Post's legacy includes Pro Bono Productions, the nonprofit he started in 1996 to elevate the profiles of older actors in show business. "Our industry...
- 8/21/2013
- by Jenni Miller
- Moviefone
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