Clint Eastwood - People

Clint Eastwood

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Posted by: Whidden

Clint Eastwood is just plain cool. Growing up, I had 4 favorite movie stars that I would watch any movie they were in.

John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart, Cary Grant and Clint Eastwood .

Personality wise, I am more like Jimmy Stewart than the rest of them. But who doesn't want to be a badass like Clint?

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Posted by: Whidden

quote:
There's only one way to have a happy marriage and as soon as I learn what it is I'll get married again.----Clint Eastwood
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Posted by: Whidden

quote:
Respect your efforts, respect yourself. Self-respect leads to self-discipline. When you have both firmly under your belt, that's real power.-----Clint Eastwood
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Posted by: Whidden

Clint Eastwood was in the Outlaw Josey Wales. Quotes from that movie:

quote:
Captain Terral: Not a hard man to track. Leaves dead men wherever he goes. (from the Outlaw Josey Wales)



quote:
Clint Eastwood as Josey Wales: Whenever I get to liking some one they ain't around long.
Lone Watie: I noticed when you get to disliking someone they around for long neither."


quote:
Josey Wales: You a bounty hunter?
Bounty Hunter: A man's got to do something for a living these days.
Josey Wales: Dying ain't much of a living, boy."



quote:
Clint Eastwood (Josey Wales): Now remember, things look bad and it looks like you're not gonna make it, then you gotta get mean. I mean plumb, mad-dog mean. 'Cause if you lose your head and you give up then you neither live nor win. That's just the way it is.


quote:
JOSEY: There are three kinds of suns in Missouri: Sunshines, sunflowers, and sons-of-*****es.
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Posted by: Whidden

Clint was in a movie called a Fist full of Dollars: Here are a couple of quotes:

quote:
Man With No Name: You see my mule don't like people laughing. He gets the crazy idea you're laughing at him. Now if you apologize like I know you're going to, I might convince him that you really didn't mean it...(music builds up and 5 shots are fired)!



quote:
Clint Eastwood as Man With No Name: When a man with a 45 meets a man with a rifle, you said the man with a pistol's a dead man. Lets see if that's true."
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Posted by: Whidden

Clint was in a movie called For a Few Dollars more. Here are some quotes:

quote:
Mortimer: As you're aware, when two hunters go after the same prey, they usually end up shooting each other in the back, and we don't want to shoot each other in the back.


quote:
Man With No Name: 16...17...22...22? (Gun Blast!) 27!
Mortimer: Any trouble boy?
Man With No Name: No old man. Thought I was having trouble with my adding, it's all right now.


quote:
Mortimer: My boy, you've become rich.
Man with no name: You mean we've become rich old man.
Mortimer: No it's all for you. I think you deserve it.
Man with no name: What about our partnership?
Mortimer: Maybe next time.


quote:
Indio: Where are you going?
Man With No Name: Well, if there's gonna be any shooting...I gotta get my rest."


quote:
Mortimer: Boy, I've reached almost 50 years of age with my system. Not many men last long in these parts. How long do you expect to last?
Man with no name: Much longer than that. When I get my hands on Indio and that $10,000 dollars, I'm gonna buy myself a little place, possibly retire.
Mortimer: Yeah, well I don't believe we ought to start another fight, but you forget one small detail.
Man with no name: What's that?
Mortimer: I'm gonna get my hands on Indio too.
Man with no name: After Me.
Mortimer: Or before you.....or at the same time.
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Posted by: Whidden

My favorite The Good, The Bad and the Ugly quote from Clint:

quote:
Clint Eastwood as Man With No Name : You see in this world there's two kinds of people my friend, those with loaded guns, and those who dig...you dig!
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Posted by: Whidden

Found a short Bio on Clint on the web:

quote:
Real name:
Clinton Eastwood Jr.

Born:
31 May 1930, San Francisco, California, USA.

Height:
6' 4"

Spouse
'Dina Ruiz' (31 March 1996 - present)
'Maggie Johnson' (1953 - 1978) (divorced)

Trivia
-Is a partial owner of the Pebbles Beach Golf Country Club in Monterey Peninsula, California.
-Owns the inn Mission Ranch, Carmel, California, USA
-(1998) Received an honorary Cesar award in Paris, France for his body of work.
-(October 1997) Ranked #2 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time" list.
-(12 December 1996) Daughter, with Dina Ruiz, Morgan, born.
-(29 Feb 1996) American Film Institute Life Achievement Award
-Clint Eastwood wore the same poncho, without ever having washed it, in all three of his "man with no name" western movies.
-When Eastwood first gained popularity with his first three major films Buono, il brutto, il cattivo, Il (1966), -Per qualche dollaro in pił (1965) and Per un pugno di dollari (1964) Jolly Films (who produced Per un pugno di dollari (1964) ) created a film called The Magnificent Stranger which was actually two episodes of "Rawhide" (1959) edited together. -Eastwood sued and the film was withdrawn.
-(1986) Elected mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA.
-Clint was apparently such an organised director that he finished his movie Absolute Power (1997) days ahead of schedule.
-When Don Siegel fell ill during production of Dirty Harry (1971), Eastwood stepped in as director during the attempted-suicide/jumper sequence.
-Got his first acting role in Rawhide while visiting a friend at the CBS lot when a studio exec spotted him because he "looked like a cowboy."
-Father of Alison Eastwood
-Father of Kyle Eastwood
-Served in the United States Army.
-Child by Frances Fisher: Francesca Ruth Eastwood
-Child by Roxanne Tunis: Kimber Eastwood (1964)
-Father of two children by Jacelyn Reeves: Kathryn b. February 2, 1988 Scott b. March 21, 1986
-Partner with Sondra Locke from 1975 thru 1988 (co-habitated from 1977-1988)
-Current wife (1999), Dina Ruiz, is a former local television news anchor/reporter in California.

Biography from Leonard Maltin's Movie Encyclopedia:

Actor, producer, director. (b. May 31, 1930, San Francisco.) How many would ever have thought that a tall, laconic, squinty star of spaghetti Westerns and cop thrillers would end up directing art movies? Not many, we'd guess. In truth, though, that's been just another phase, just a natural extension of a career that has consistently confounded expectations. Reportedly an easygoing but shiftless young man who'd already worked in a variety of dead-end menial jobs (such as gas-station attendant) before reaching Hollywood in 1955, Eastwood wangled a contract at Universal thanks to director Arthur Lubin, and played bit parts that year in Francis in the Navy, Tarantula and Revenge of the Creature Universal subsequently dropped Eastwood, but in 1959 he signed to star in the TV series "Rawhide," which kept him busy for the next six years.

During the 1964 hiatus, he flew to Italy to star in a Western quickie, and thought no more of it until he found out that A Fistful of Dollars was a titanic success. He went back the next summer and again donned his flat-brimmed sombrero and ragged poncho in a sequel, For a Few Dollars More and again for The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (both 1966). That year, all three were finally released in the U.S., and "The Man With No Name" (as his character was billed) suddenly found himself atop the box-office charts. His icy, tightlipped, implacable character-a triggerhappy gunman with his own moral codestruck just the right chord with 1960s audiences, who were just discovering in Humphrey Bogart a Hollywood relic with similar existential appeal. (It hardly mattered that Eastwood's character parodied the traditional Western-movie hero.)

Finally a star in his own country, Eastwood thereafter wisely varied his roles-though singing in the ambitious Western musical Paint Your Wagon (1969) may have stretched things a bit too farand began a fruitful collaboration with director Don Siegel that resulted in such excellent and distinctive films as Coogan's Bluff (1968), Two Mules for Sister Sara (1970), The Beguiled and of course, Dirty Harry (both 1971), which spawned four sequels, virtually invented the loosecannon cop genre, and gave him the screen character for which he will always be remembered. (Ironically, he only took the role after Frank Sinatra dropped out at the last minute.)

In 1971, Eastwood made his directorial debut with the chiller Play Misty for Me and continued to wield the megaphone frequently thereafter. Eastwood also set up his own production company, Malpaso, and for the next 15 years churned out hit after hit, alternating action films with offbeat comedies; notable in this period were High Plains Drifter (1973), The OutlawJosey Wales (1976), The Gauntlet (1977), Every Which Way But Loose (1978), Escape From Alcatraz (1979, directed by Siegel), Tightrope (1984), Pale Rider (1985, a return to Westerns and a thinly disguised reworking of Shane), and Heartbreak Ridge (1986).

As Eastwood neared 60, his star began to dim, but he continued to surprise. He directed Bird (1988), a critically acclaimed biography of jazz great Charlie Parker; starred in and directed White Hunter, Black Heart (1990, playing a film director modeled after John Huston); and assumed the same chores on The Rookie (1991, with Charlie Sheen). Extremely canny about alternating mass-audience movies with more personal, limited-appeal projects, Eastwood managed to combine both types of films with Unforgiven (1992), a revisionist Western that won rave reviews-as well as Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Director-and did extremely well at the box office. Following this personal triumph, he agreed to act in someone else's movie for the first time in years and delivered one of the best performances of his career as an aging Secret Service man (who just happens to play jazz piano) in In the Line of Fire (1993). Definitely on a winning streak, he then teamed up with Kevin Costner to costar in and direct A Perfect World (also 1993). In 1995, Eastwood won the Academy's Irving Thalberg award, then directed and acted opposite Meryl Streep in The Bridges of Madison County (1995). He has also served as mayor of his hometown of Carmel, California. It may be revealing that this superstar of shoot-'em-ups both urban and Western has said for years that his own favorite of his films is the cerebral and highly stylized The Beguiled
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Posted by: becker

I think it is all right to like someone for performances in Roles . However, I don't worship any movie actors or acrtesses when I see what happened in their private lives. I find that most of them lived in a dreamworld and treated people like ants. They stepped all over them . Clint, baby, starred with his live in woman in many movies and then threw her out on the street without any means of support. Guess he got tired of her. Sorry to all of you that worship those people. I think we are much better than they will ever be. I enjoy their performances but I don't want to see them off screen.

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Posted by: chodder

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly was an awesome movie! I loved the end with all the rocks and the final duo.

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Posted by: Whidden

http://pages.prodigy.net/rogerlori1/emoticons/worship.gif

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Posted by: Whidden

I think it would be cool to hang with Clint Eastwood. My other 3 favorite movie actors are dead, so Clint is the last one on the list.

Drink some beer, smoke a cigar. (Though I don't smoke, I would fire one up.)

Actually Becker, Clint is a Democrat and I'm a conservative, so I'm not carrying the worship thing to far.

I don't see anything wrong with respecting an actor, if you identify with them.......

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Posted by: becker

I respect his acting. That's all I respect. Is Charlie Sheen still in Rehab? Are any of the good actors out of rehab yet? How about the guy who played Charlie Chaplin and was on Ally McBeal for awhile until he got sent away? And he is one of my most favored actors, too. Darn those people. Why can't they live lives that I can admire as much as their acting prowess. I'm unhappy about this.

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Posted by: Whidden

I respect Clint. He is not perfect, but who is? Everybody has some faults.

Clint don't do drugs and does public service (Mayor and all that).

So he left his first wife. I don't like divorce either but there are two sides to every story. The only movies I ever saw Sandra Lock in were Clint Eastwood movies. If she was a good actress, which she wasn't, she could have found work after they broke up.

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