
“In TV, I saw so much that I wouldn’t do as a director; I was prepared,” remarked Clint Eastwood who made the decision to occupy the director’s chair for a project in which he would also star. “The overall concept of a film was more important to me than just acting.” The rookie moviemaker did not have to look far to find the appropriate material. “One of my friends, Jo Heims, had written a script I was fond of, Play Misty for Me [1971]. I’d even taken out an option on it. I had just been offered Where Eagles Dare [1968] when she called me to ask my advice. Universal was offering to buy her script and to renew the option. Of course, I encouraged her to sell it to them. It was some years later, after I’d signed a contract with Universal for three movies, I could tell them, ‘By the way, you’ve got a project on your shelf I’d like to do. I also want to direct it.’ Because it wasn’t a very costly production, I got the green light.” A brief affair with a female admirer (Jessica Walter) has fatal consequences for a small town celebrity (Eastwood). “The character played by Jessica Walter, which was suggested to Jo Heims by an acquaintance of hers, was familiar to me. It’s someone who fantasizes a love relationship. For the disc jockey, it’s a one-night stand but for her it’s a devouring passion. This misunderstanding interested me; when do you become involved in a love affair? To what extent are we responsible for the relationships we establish?”

“We shot it in four and a half weeks. We had a five week schedule. We were two and half days under schedule,” said Clint Eastwood. “We rented houses, moved in and shot.” Complications arose with the studio over the selection of music. “I needed a song that was not so old that the present generation would say, ‘Gee. I never heard of that.’ It had to be something that everyone from 18 on would recognize. The studio wanted me to use Strangers in the Night, which they owned, but it’s not a classic. There’s that dooby-dooby do at the end; I just thought it wouldn’t work.” Describing the picture at the time of its release, Eastwood stated, “It’s got a lot of action and suspense, and I used a small crew and a low budget of only $800,000 but I got more than $800,000 on the screen. At least I know if it’s a failure it’s my own fault.” Looking back, the native of San Francisco recalls, “I remember that after I finished I was a wreck. I disguised myself and went and sat in a theatre. There were teenage girls right in front of me. I was sweating bullets and I thought, ‘What happens if they boo?’ and then [actress] Jessica Walter came flying out from behind a screen and everyone screamed and I thought, ‘Hey, this isn’t so bad. It’s working.’” Domestically Play Misty for Me would gross $11 million and Jessica Walter received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress – Drama.

A different narrative style was utilized compared to the unconnected vignette technique adopted by Sergio Leone (A Fistful of Dollars). “In High Plains Drifter, all the elements overlap, even though there are several subplots. Everything is related to the protagonist’s nightmare,” said Clint Eastwood who purposely minimized the exposition. “The traditional way of doing it was to just lay everything out. Using the Western as an example: as the guy rides into town he sees a man beating a horse. He interferes, punches the guy out, so you know immediately that’s the antagonist with whom the hero is going to resolve a conflict later on. Then he sees the school marm on the porch and she gives him a stare and you also know that they’re going to be romantically involved. You can almost draw the ending right there, in the first five minutes. The audience should never be able to anticipate that far ahead where it’s going, because otherwise they sit there waiting for the movie to catch up with them.” Adding to the cinematic atmosphere was the setting. “Mono Lake is a dead lake. It has some very interesting outcroppings and the colours almost change moment by moment, so it gave the film an elusive quality.”
“The visuals at the beginning set up the mood of the rider,” said Clint Eastwood. “I took a piece of the heat wave out of the corner of the shot and blew it up so it was the same texture in the whole frame. As it was initially, I couldn’t get back far enough with the lens to get the rider out of sight, so I just started with a blank screen and dissolved through it. With the heat wave you don’t notice the dissolve. Things like that set the tone for the film, but from the very beginning I saw the film clearly. It was the reason I decided to direct it.” Clint Eastwood stars along with Verna Bloom (After Hours), Marianne Hill (Medium Cool), Mitch Ryan (Lethal Weapon), Jack Ging, Stefan Gierasch (Carrie), Ted Hartly (Ice Station Zebra), and Buddy Van Horn (The Deer Hunter). “We built a little town, interiors and exteriors, and shot the picture in five weeks.” High Plains Drifter which is described by the filmmaker as being a “small morality play” earned $16 million domestically.

“I took a book Universal owned – a bestseller – and I couldn’t figure out what to do,’ confessed Clint Eastwood who chose to cinematically adapt The Eiger Sanction (1975), an action thriller by author Dr. Rodney William Whitaker; a retired professional assassin (Eastwood) seeks to avenge the murder of an old friend. “The book has no ties. In other words, the character who is killed at the beginning has no relationship with anybody else. I just took it and tried to make the guy relate to the hero, so the hero had some other motivations. The way the book was written, he had no motivations for anything. He just went there [to the Eiger], strictly for monetary gain. At the end, he’s not with any of the people he started with – including the girl.” The production presented numerous challenges. “There were three stories in one and it was a difficult picture to make. A good thing our gadgets were limited in number; we were running the risk of heading in the direction of the James Bond movies. The mountaineering sequences posed enormous problems. We had to shoot with two crews, one crew of technicians and one crew of mountain climbers. Every morning, we had to decide, according to the weather report, which one to send up the mountain. The three actors and I had to undergo intensive training. On the seventh day of filming we lost one of our mountaineers, and, believe me, I asked myself repeatedly if it was worth it.” Grossing $14 million domestically The Eiger Sanction features Clint Eastwood, George Kennedy (Cool Hand Luke), Vonetta McGee (Repo Man), Jack Cassidy (The Andersonville Trial), Heidi Bruhl (Captain Sinbad), Thayer David (Rocky), Reiner Schöne (Priest), and Michael Grimm (Heavyweights). “The humour was frankly sardonic but I believe it was inherent in the story. I couldn’t have considered handling it otherwise.”

The Outlaw Josey Wales cost $4 million to make and it took eight and half weeks to complete the principle photography. “Josey was difficult in the sense that we shot in Utah, two different locations in Arizona, and in California – we had to move a lot on that one because it’s a saga – you have to feel the travelling in the land.” The filmmaker was forewarned by the locals about the unpredictable weather conditions. “People there told us that the year before, a film crew had to suspend operations for 17 days, because it rained continuously. I still remember how we examined the sky every day.” The natural elements turned out to be agreeable. “For the opening montage of the war, I didn’t want any sunlight. It gives it a much more somber effect. The first part of the film showed an idyllic light; then all of a sudden it goes to a very somber tone. It gradually gets to a nicer tone as his life gets better when he gets to the ranch and starts winning – going from loser to a winner. That was the way it was planned and fortunately ‘The Head Gaffer Up Above’ stayed with us.”

“It was written by Dennis Shryack [Turner and Hooch] and Michael Butler [Flashpoint],” remarked Clint Eastwood of the action thriller The Gauntlet (1977). “It was in good shape. There was a minor amount of rewriting, a lot of it deletions.” Summarizing the story, the director stated, “A cop starts out to fly an extradited witness from Vegas back to Phoenix for trial. Everything goes wrong – there’s this group of people who don’t want him to get back. She’s a hooker and he’s a cop who hates hookers, but they grow together as they go – via car, foot, motorcycle, train, bus, you name it.” Reflecting on the character of Ben Shockley, who lacks the slickness and decisiveness of his signature character of Dirty Harry, Eastwood remarked, “The cop of The Gauntlet is a guy who just follows routine, not very sharp, easy to manipulate. All he expects from life are simple things: to do his job well, find a wife, settle down. When he confesses his longings, it happens that he’s talking to a woman he would ordinarily have treated like a whore but who’s much more clever than he is. She’s the one who opens his eyes because he’s too regimented to understand what’s going on; he can’t imagine that his superiors could deceive him deliberately.”

“They run the gauntlet at the end. Their bus travels down through town and is ripped to shreds, hence the title,” stated Clint Eastwood of the over-the-top conclusion which was based on a infamous real life incident. “I had seen on television the barrage of gunfire that followed the abduction of Patty Hearst by the Symbionese Liberation Army – a tremendous barrage, in the middle of the city. Bullets flew in all directions and at least three buildings caught fire. I imagined what would occur in a city of middling importance like Las Vegas; a city where almost nothing happens, where the police don’t have anything to do but arrest a drunk from time to time. If it were suddenly announced that Public Enemy Number One had seized a bus and taken a police officer hostage all the cops in town would want to be in on the strike and it’s predictable that their reaction would be excessive.” The Gauntlet earned $26 million domestically and was given a loose remake with Bruce Willis in 16 Blocks (2006).
Clint Eastwood returned to Western genre to play a gunfighter who struggles to remain part of a quickly fading era.
Continue to part three.
For more on the legendary actor and filmmaker, visit Clint Eastwood.net and ClintEastwoodSite.com, along with the Dirty Harry fan-site The-Dirtiest.com.
Five Essential Films of Clint Eastwood
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
No comments:
Post a Comment