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Clint: The Man and the Movies

Clint: The Man and the Movies

by Shawn Levy

Mariner Books ·2025 ·560 pages ·Film & TV
Near the Top
Near the Top
I Index
53/99
Maybe Someday

46/99

Critics

Near the Top

60/99

Readers

n/a

Scholars

27/99

Rating

66/99

Volume

50/99

Rating

69/99

Volume

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About This Book

From the acclaimed film critic and New York Times bestselling biographer of Paul Newman, the definitive biography of Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood, the most prolific and versatile actor-director in the history of the medium, and an indelible fixture of American culture. C-L-I-N-T. In that short, sharp syllable, there is an emblem of American manhood and morality and sheer bloody-minded will, for better and worse, on screen and off, for more than sixty years. Whether he's holding a pistol, an orangutan, or a boxing glove; whether he's facing down bad guys on a western street (Old West or new, no matter); staring through the lens of a camera; or accepting one of his thirteen Oscars (including two for Best Picture); he is as blunt, curt, and solid as his name, a star of the old school stripe and one of the most prolific and accomplished directors of his time, a man of rock and iron and brute Clint. To tell the story of Clint Eastwood is to tell the story of nearly a century of American culture. No Hollywood figure so completely and complexly represents the cultural and political climates of contemporary America. At age ninety-four, he has lived a tumultuous century and embodied much of his time and many of its contradictions. We picture him most immediately as he has appeared to us on squinting through cigarillo smoke in A Fistful of Dollars or The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly; imposing rough justice at the point of a .44 Magnum in Dirty Harry; sowing moral vengeance in The Outlaw Josey Wales or Pale Rider; abandoning farming for murder-for-hire in Unforgiven; grudgingly training a woman boxer in Million Dollar Baby; standing up for his neighbors despite his racism toward them in Gran Torino. But those are roles, however well-cast and convincing, and they are two-dimensional in comparison to the whole life. The reality of Clint Eastwood is far more rich, knotty, and absorbing—a saga of cunning, determination, and conquest, a great American story about a man ascending to the Hollywood pantheon while keeping a gimlet eye on its ways and habits and one foot firmly planted outside its door.


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Reviews

"Levy maintains chronology with a shrewd interweaving of projects; cutting back and forth between movies in production and ones in release ..."

Richard Brody· The New Yorker Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Levy steers a fair course between hagiography and demolition job in bringing the star's life and career bang up to date ..."

Anne Billson· The Times (UK) Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Levy writes well about the themes that thread through Eastwood's mature work, and the ways his onscreen persona becomes increasingly layered and contradictory over time."

A. O. Scott· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"An evenhanded if overly effusive appreciation of Clint Eastwood's career."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"[Yet], the book's focus on the films—which, again, can be astute—sits uncomfortably next to personal incidents involving intense violence, rampant infidelity, petty vindictiveness and even coerced sterilization ..."

Jonathan Russell Clark· The Washington Post Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

"Clint supplies a nice, steady drip of gossip."

Adam Nayman· The Nation Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

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