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Magnum Farce
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For the past week, I've been
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driving people nuts with my Clint Eastwood impression. I don't do an especially
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good one, but then, Eastwood is not especially difficult to do. You lower your
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voice, pull it back into your throat so that it's breathy, verging on a rasp
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and yet smooth, almost plangent, then expel the line from The Outlaw
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Josey Wales (1976) addressed to the bounty hunter who insists that he's
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only trying to make a living, "Dyin' ain't much of a livin', boy." It's a
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bedroom voice, menacing but seductive, with over-deliberate diction that
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implies, "I'm so powerful, so coiled, so masculine that I have to modulate my
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tone--or else." Eastwood's most famous Dirty Harryisms--"Ask yourself, 'Do I
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feel lucky?' Well, do ya, punk ?" and "Go ahead, make my day"--are
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purring come-ons: The bad guy is practically compelled to submit to this tall,
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handsome killer with his long Magnum pistol. Submit, in many cases, by going
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for his gun and getting blown into orgasmic nonexistence.
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Eastwood
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has one of the great movie voices of our era, but it's also kind of ridiculous.
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Probably no star could get away with it if he weren't such an image of cool, as
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beautiful and remote and self-contained as Garbo or Chet Baker. What has
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enraptured so many critics, among them Richard Schickel in Clint Eastwood: A
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Biography , is that the actor-director has learned to play with his own
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inexpressiveness--to make a joke of his frigid machismo without (and here's
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where the supreme balancing act comes in) travestying it. Eastwood, in this
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view, contains within himself both the myth and the anti-myth. I think that
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he's a fine, lightweight comic presence at times (his scowl is a psychotic
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version of a comedian's classic slow burn), but Schickel goes further. He calls
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Eastwood "one of the great ironists of the age" and a "postmodern" hero:
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"Clint's gift," he writes, forever on a first-name basis with his subject, "is
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to let us see the dark comedy in the American male's contorting, distorting
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attempts to achieve his masteries of the moment while at the same time not
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entirely discrediting the tradition that makes him bid that effort."
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Whew: That's some gift. Schickel is alternately sycophantic
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(toward Eastwood) and pugilistic (toward any critic who has ever had unkind
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words for the actor--particularly Pauline Kael, who did seem to have a mission
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to make the tall man's Magnum shrivel). The book has the breathless indulgence
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of a campaign biography ("Clint's lack of selfishness, his predilection for
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throwing scenes to other actors--partly out of generosity, partly out of a
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serene confidence in the force of his own presence ... "). In the end, Schickel
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seems happiest simply basking in the star's aura, preferring the company of
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Eastwood "in the fading light of certain wintry afternoons" to trudging around
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and interviewing anyone with a different version of events or a contrasting
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point of view.
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That
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doesn't surprise me, since contrasting points of view don't make it into
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Eastwood's movies, either, which is why I have some trouble accepting this
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notion of the actor-director as an "ironist." In the Dirty Harry movies or the
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rabidly right-wing 1986 Heartbreak
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Ridge (which ends with a
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potency-reclaiming invasion of Grenada), there's little irony in Eastwood's
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superiority to the succession of louts, prisses, and psychopaths whom his
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character inevitably clobbers or blows away, or in the fact that he is of
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greater stature than the actors with whom he surrounds himself. Eastwood might
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acknowledge the faint absurdity of these heroes, but none is ever ultimately
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proved wrong. Even the hell-bound William Munny in the compelling
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Unforgiven (1992)--who does, admittedly, shoot a rather nice young
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cowboy in the gut, but instantly regrets it--ends up killing the sort of people
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who, when all is said and done, need killing.
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When Schickel stops duking it out with Eastwood's
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antagonists, his analyses can be trenchant. He's especially evocative on the
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three "spaghetti Westerns" that Eastwood made with Sergio Leone, for whom the
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actor forged his amusingly taciturn on-screen persona. Leone, Schickel writes,
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developed a style that alternated cunningly between extreme wide shots and
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extreme close-ups partly in an effort to monumentalize Eastwood's face; the
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director's mise en scène became "a landscape of masks." But then it's
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back to the issue of "irony," and Schickel's evasions can make your jaw drop.
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The rousing Dirty Harry (1971) is inarguably a template for the modern,
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right-wing vigilante picture, replete with digs at Miranda rights, due process,
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and the burgeoning civil-liberties movement. Yet here is Schickel, quoting
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Eastwood's insistence that the film has no larger political agenda: "It's just
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the story of one particular police officer in a frustrating situation on one
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particular case." (And Willie Horton is just some guy.) The author concludes,
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"It is as a rule absurd, and utterly unrealistic, to see ideological motives,
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let alone ideological malevolence" in action pictures; he is conveniently
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omitting any reference here to Eastwood's pal John Milius, the gleeful
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liberal-basher who scripted many of the banner lines in Dirty Harry and
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Magnum Force (1973). Of The Enforcer (1976) , Schickel
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notes, "Certainly today, attitudes having radically changed, Clint would
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retract [the movie's] casual contempt for homosexuals, admittedly a feature of
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his early action films." That would be mighty white of him! And for this
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biographer, "one of the most tasteful campaigns in the history of modern
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American politics"--Eastwood's run, as a property-rights Republican, for mayor
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of Carmel, Calif.--was one in which the star likened a civic ordinance that
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would ban second kitchens to "Adolf Hitler knocking on your door."
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OK, so Eastwood's not a rocket scientist. But Schickel does
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seem to see him as some sort of Delphic oracle, and his attempts to translate
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the man's monosyllabic pronouncements make for hilarity: " 'Women,' Clint says,
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a sort of sad befuddlement in his tone, 'always want to know what you're
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thinking.' " Schickel enlarges: "It is a mystery to him, this desire to
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penetrate the deepest reserves of his privacy. It is equally a mystery to him
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why anyone would think that bringing things up out of this murk and discussing
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them would profit either party. At our cores, he believes, for whatever reason,
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we are what we are, and there is nothing much to be done about that--beyond
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simply accepting the hard facts of personality."
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"We are
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what we are, and there is nothing much to be done about that" doesn't make for
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a very interesting aesthetic, and Eastwood's dry, dodgy movies (Schickel touts
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"their directness of address, their plainspoken psychological realism") bear
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the stamp of this shrunken worldview. A psychiatrist could make the case that
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the star's legendary promiscuity, with its attendant insulation and fear of
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commitment, has artistic consequences. Compare Eastwood with Charlie Parker,
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for instance, whom Eastwood idolizes and about whom he made the reverent biopic
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Bird (1988). The English writer Daniel O'Brien, in his modest, more
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objective new book, Clint Eastwood Film-Maker , suggests that Eastwood
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wouldn't actually put up with Parker for a second: The saxophonist's unruly
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passion, his commitment to his art, is the antithesis of Eastwood's manly,
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frugal, shoot-it-and-move-on way of working. But Schickel is starry-eyed. He
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compares the films (and Eastwood's masculine posing) to the modern-jazz manner,
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"a powerful desire--almost amounting to a morality--not to woo the audience ...
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a profound desire not to make what he does look costly to him, emotionally or
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intellectually."
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One could argue that Eastwood has merely masked
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his inadequacies as artistic choices. But I wouldn't want to go too far. I
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frequently enjoy his movies, and there's no arguing with the fact that his
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stardom has endured for more than three decades. There might be a kind of
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genius here, but it's the genius of a seducer, not an artist. Eastwood makes
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use of the traditional tools--his size, his handsomeness, the aura of mystery
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he so manifestly cultivates. But the seduction also occurs in unexpected ways.
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Reading the book, I found myself conscious of, and moved by, the ways in which
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Schickel has been drawn in by Eastwood, compelled to fill all kinds of sad,
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moody spaces. The author doesn't simply idolize his subject, he feels he needs
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to cover for Eastwood's failures and rationalizations the way one might for an
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absent or inadequate father. Above all, he wants us to see the star as
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misunderstood, under unfair attack from all sides--the women who demand
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something more than his sexual favors, the liberal media with its shrill
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feminists and snobby elitists.
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In an age
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when Ronald Reagan has slipped into the haze of Alzheimer's disease, when Susan
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Faludi writes movingly of males clinging to stereotypical notions of machismo
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as they're laid off their factory jobs and symbolically robbed of potency, it
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can put a lump in your throat to watch Schickel building--like the hero in
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Field of Dreams --a shrine to the Dad whom so many elements of the
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culture have come to undervalue. Eastwood's decision to play dumb, in films
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like The Gauntlet (1977) and Bronco
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Billy (1980), was a
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shrewd one. It allows Schickel to write lines like, "A rude beast has been
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perceived slouching toward the Bethlehem of the New Masculinity, waiting to be
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reborn in more cuddlesome form."
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It also, to be fair, means that Eastwood can go where the
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Sylvester Stallones and Arnold Schwarzeneggers and Steven Seagals daren't. His
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performance as Frank Horrigan, an aging Secret Service agent, in In The Line
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of Fire (1993), was the most affecting he has ever given--a fallen
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stereotype, a glimpse of the human caught in the pose. But does the film
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subvert Eastwood's on-screen persona, as Schickel argues it does? How? He bests
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the bureaucratic fools. He outwits the psychotic assassin. He beds the young,
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beautiful woman. Do Eastwood's other movies really subvert the whole action
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genre? Compared with Charles Bronson's, maybe. Munny's assertion, in
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Unforgiven , that "it's a hell of a thing, killing a man. You take away
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everything he's got and everything he's ever gonna have," was hailed by some
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critics as a brave line for Eastwood to utter, given that he has dispatched so
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many anonymous thugs so offhandedly for so many years. Brave, but hypocritical.
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Eastwood did more to make killing casual than anyone in mainstream cinema. He
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paved the way for the Bronsons and Chuck Norrises and Seagals and Jean-Claude
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Van Dammes and all the other righteous slayers of post-midnight
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cable-movie-channel programming. Will history judge the hero of Richard
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Schickel's Boswellian tome as "ironic" and "postmodern"? Or as an enlightened
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Neanderthal, profitably pretending to evolve?
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