Categories
Clint Eastwood

The Clint Eastwood Collection: White Hunter, Black Heart (1990)

Trailer.

I don’t care if this picture is shot in black and white, or sepia tone, or we have to make the whole damn thing in animation. Pete and I are going to Africa.

-Clint Eastwood in White Hunter, Black Heart.
Clint takes aim at some big game in White Hunter, Black Heart.

Starring, Produced, and Directed by Clint Eastwood.

Cast list from IMDb.com.

Co-starring Jeff Fahey, George Dzunda, Marisa Berenson, and Charlotte Cornwell.

Written by Peter Viertel & James Bridges and Burt Kennedy.

Music by Lennie Niehaus.

Edited by Joel Cox.

Cinematography by Jack N. Green.

Co-Produced by Stanley Rubin.

A Warner Bros. release.

Preceded by Pink Cadillac.

Followed by The Rookie.

Of all the great pictures Clint Eastwood made in his lengthy career – this is the one I love the most and it is probably one of his least seen pictures.

Clint Eastwood, the white hunter with the black heart.
Eastwood, a director playing director, in White Hunter, Black Heart.
Man with a movie camera.

When watching this movie, you are seeing Clint Eastwood, the actor, at his best, and you are seeing Clint Eastwood, the director, at his near best.

First edition.
Movie tie-in paperback edition.

As a lifelong John Huston fan, when I heard that Eastwood was making a film based on Pete Viertel’s novel White Hunter, Black Heart, I could not wait.

Humphrey Bogart (L) with John Huston (R) on location for The African Queen.
Lobby card for The Naked Edge (1961), starring Deborah Kerr & Gary Cooper. Cooper and Viertel were friends despite both being married (at different times) to Kerr.
Theatrical poster for The Naked Edge. Screenplay by Psycho’s Joseph Stephano.
First edition paperback.
First edition hardcover (detail).
Theatrical poster for John Huston’s The African Queen.
Home video release artwork.

Viertel was a terrific screenwriter who worked with John Huston, his good friend (Viertel would also write a book on his friendships with Huston, Hemingway and Gary Cooper called Dangerous Friends) making Huston’s classic The African Queen in Africa.

Peter Viertel (L) & wife, Deborah Kerr (R).

Viertel wanted to tell the story of that experience, but tell it as an adventure story, so he wrote it as historical fiction – he changed Huston’s name to John Wilson, changed his own name to Pete Verrill, and wrote a wicked cool book.

White Hunter, Black Heart screenwriter, James Bridges.

Eastwood’s film has a faithful screenplay by James Bridges, who would go on to become a good director himself (The Paper Chase, 1973; The China Syndrome, 1979 ).

The late, great picture-maker, John Huston.
Eastwood, looking fine and dandy.

And this was not just a “Clint Eastwood film.” Eastwood was playing John Huston, who he greatly admired. He would have to give a real performance, not just a movie star turn – and that he did.

Dirty Harry meets James Bond.
Clint’s future Blood Work co-star, Anjelica Huston, around the time of White Hunter, Black Heart’s production.

Once, during an interview I was doing with Anjelica Huston, I asked her opinion on Eastwood’s portrayal of her dad – “Clint came to me beforehand with all kinds of questions, including questions about how dad walked and talked and if he had any particular physical ticks. I was surprised somewhat by the depth of his commitment to getting his portrayal right – and he did, he got the odd cadence of my dad’s speech down perfectly. He walked with that loping gait that dad did. I think he was awesome in the role.”

Searching for direction.
Eastwood (L) and Jeff Fahey (R).
Fahey standing in for Viertel
George Dzunda (L) & Eastwood (R).
Legendary super-producer, Sam Spiegel.
Theatrical poster.
Theatrical poster.

Eastwood shot the film in Zimbabwe – and the African locations make a big difference in this. His supporting cast is superb, with the underrated actor Jeff Fahey perfectly capturing Peter Viertel’s counterbalancing character to John Huston’s (Wilson’s) wild man. Another underrated guy, George Dzundza, is also perfectly cast as producer Paul Landers, based on buccaneering producer Sam Spiegel (On The Waterfront, 1954; Lawrence of Arabia, 1962).

Alternate theatrical poster.
Paperback edition.
Theatrical poster for the Eastwood-directed The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976).
Eastwood directing White Hunter, Black Heart.

While this is the story of making The African Queen in the Belgian Congo – it is also the story of Wilson’s/Huston’s obsession with big game hunting and bagging a “big tusker” (elephant) – an obsession that almost derailed the picture and almost killed him. It is an interesting story, a fascinating set of characters, and a look and feel that is not common in Clint Eastwood films, though the attention to physical detail of The Outlaw Josey Wales and White Hunter, Black Heart shows that the same guy directed both.

Clint Eastwood (L), Charlotte Cornwell (C), and Jeff Fahey (R).
Marisa Berenson waits for her director, Eastwood, in the Katherine Hepburn part (Kay Gibson) waiting for her director, John Wilson (John Huston).
Clint and his biggest co-star in a lobby card for White Hunter, Black Heart.

For me, a Clint Eastwood fan and a John Huston fan, this movie is just fucking delicious – especially the performance of Eastwood as a devil-may-care filmmaker in Africa on location. You can see in Eastwood’s performance that he knew he was nailing the character and loving it. If you haven’t seen White, Hunter, Black Heart – seek it out – it’s damn good.

“Hope, hell, I’ll die broke in some downtown Los Angeles flophouse – and I won’t be bitter. I’ll have contributed five or ten damn good pictures. They’ll even name a special Academy Award after me, and do you know what? All the wrong guys’ll get it.”

John Wilson/Clint Eastwood
White Hunter, Black Heart.
“Action.” A great last line.

Categories
Clint Eastwood

The Clint Eastwood Collection: True Crime (1999)

Trailer.
Title shot.

Starring, written, produced, and directed by Clint Eastwood.

Cast list from IMDb.com.

Co-starring Isaiah Washington, Lisa Gay Hamilton, James Woods, Denis Leary, Mary McCormack, Diane Venora, Michael McKean, Michael Jeter, and Bernard Hill.

Written by Larry Gross, Paul Brickman, and Stephen Schiff, based on the novel by Andrew Klavan.

Produced by Lili Fini Zanuck and Richard D. Zanuck.

Cinematography by Jack N. Green.

Edited by Joel Cox.

Music by Lennie Niehaus

A Zanuck Company / Malpaso production.

A Warner Bros. release.

Preceded by Absolute Power.

Followed by Space Cowboys.

Streaming release artwork.
DVD front cover.

Warner Bros.’ official synopsis:

“Boozer, skirt chaser, careless father. You could create your own list of reporter Steve Everett’s faults, but there’s no time. A San Quentin death row prisoner is slated to die at midnight – a man Everett has suddenly realized is innocent. Clint Eastwood memorably plays Everett in “True Crime,” a savvy beat-the-clock thriller. Isaiah Washington, Denis Leary, Lisa Gay Hamilton, James Woods, Diane Venora and others populate this suspense tale that tightens to nerve-fraying intensity, intercutting the parallel stories of the inmate and Everett’s scramble to save him… and perhaps lift his own life out of the trash heap along the way. Everett is harried, determined and trying not to self-destruct. And the clock is ticking.”

Reverse cover of blu-ray release.
The podcast that exploded our current true crime craze.

Eastwood’s overlooked 1999 mystery-drama was significantly ahead of its time in prefiguring the true crime craze of the post-Serial, post-COVID streaming era.

The iconic WB tower.
Eastwood (L) in promo for Warner Bros. cenenial celebrations.
Director Christopher Nolan’s “special relationship” with Warner Bros, famously flamed out over the studio’s pandemic/Tenet-era day-and-date release strategy. His BestPicture winning Oppenheimer was produced at rival studio, Universal.
Theatrical poster.
Available on the platform in the US, True Crime is not currently streaming on Netflix in Canada.

If not for Eastwood’s singularly special relationship with Warner Bros. (only Christopher Nolan has had it so good at the studio, though for nowhere near as long a tenure), this is exactly the type of picture that would premiere on Netflix if produced today.

Thumbs up from St. Roger.
https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/true-crime-1999
Ebersol (L) flirts with Eastwood (R).

A critical and commercial disappointment upon its release (though Roger Ebert notably gave it a favourable review), twenty-five years later, nearly all of it has aged remarkably well (with the exception of poor, underused Christine Ebersol, who is saddled with some dead-on-arrival, faux-progressive, flirty banter in a thankless role).

Eastwood takes a call in a Japanese advert for True Crime.

Eastwood wears the part of Steve Everett, a disillusioned, time-weathered, down-on-his-luck reporter, like a tailored suit (or one of the comfy, rumpled, button-ups that he favours in this picture).

James Woods (R) counsels Clint Eastwood (L) on journalistic etiquette.

If your nose for a story is gone, my friend, you’re gone, too.

James Woods to Clint Eastwood in True Crime

Clint’s charm is the picture is effortless, and his dogged investigative reporter is a nice variation on the tough-guy detective roles he made so famous in the Dirty Harry (1971) franchise, along with his many other cop procedurals like Coogan’s Bluff (1968), The Gauntlet (1977), City Heat (1984), Tightrope (1984), The Rookie (1990), A Perfect World (1993), and Blood Work (2002).

The original Dirty Harry (1971) was followed by four sequels: Magnum Force (1973), The Enforcer (1976), Sudden Impact (1983), and The Dead Pool (1988).
Dirty Harry gets the Barbie doll treatment.
Theatrical poster for Coogan’s Bluff (1968).
Theatrical poster for The Gauntlet (1977).
Theatrical poster for City Heat (1984).
Theatrical poster for Tightrope (1984).
Theatrical poster for The Rookie (1990).
Theatrical poster for A Perfect World (1993).
Theatrical poster for Blood Work (2002).

Eastwood gives a much gentler performance here than in those other pictures mentioned above. His washed-up newsman is not just another tough cop spitting out trailer-friendly one-liners before knocking off some undesirable bad guy. He doesn’t threaten, flash a badge, pull a gun, or throw any punches. He’s just a man of advancing years who has learned to survive by his wits and his charm.

Eastwood (R) and Rene Russo (L) in In The Line of Fire.
Theatrical poster for In The Line Of Fire (1993).

Playing Everett afforded Eastwood opportunities for some lighter comedic, even romantic, moments, recalling his work as Frank Horrigan in 1993’s excellent political assassination thriller, In The Line Of Fire, directed by Wolfgang Peterson (Das Boot), my favourite Eastwood performance of all.

Eastwood’s trademark glower is slightly less menacing this time out.

In True Crime, Eastwood stars as the newly-sober, old school investigative reporter, Steve Everett, who is on something of a life and career downturn after screwing up an important story back when he was drinking way too much.

Mary McCormack (L) doesn’t quite fall for Eastwood’s (R) charms in True Crime.

Everett gets an unexpected shot at redemption when his colleague at the paper, Michelle, played with much charm by Mary McCormack (the Howard Stern pseudo-biopic, Private Parts), is killed driving home drunk from a night out at the bar with him. McCormack’s brief performance is impressive in that she is only given this brief opening sequence in which to make an impression that must last for the rest of the picture, and she does just that.

McCormack makes a big impression with little screen time.

The bar scene is a playful, nicely nuanced two-hander in which Eastwood’s aging, habitual philanderer’s fading charms almost work on Michelle, before she wises up (though not enough to call a taxi).

Establishing aerial shot of San Quentin from the days before drones, when you needed a helicopter for a shot like this.
Washington is excellent as death row inmate Frank Beecham.

After Michelle’s death, a deeply shaken Everett takes over the last story she was working on before her crash: the possible wrongful conviction and incarceration of death row inmate Frank Beecham (Isaiah Washington, Clockers, Out of Sight), whose scheduled execution by lethal injection is imminent.

Marissa Ribisi (Giovanni’s sister) plays dead.

Isaiah Washington displays great compassion, dignity, grace, and fury in the role of a man clinging to his faith in god and his unwavering asseveration that he is innocent of the brutal murder for which he has been convicted – the cold blooded, daylight killing of a convenience store clerk, played by alt-rocker Beck’s ex-wife, Marissa Ribisi (Richard Linklater’s Dazed & Confused).

Washington in Clockers, bathed in Robert Richardson-inspired top light, courtesy of cinematographer Malik Hassan Sayeed (Belly).

Four years earlier, Washington showed that same slow-simmering intensity, passion, and quiet suffering in the Richard Price-penned, Spike Lee-directed Clockers (1995).

Original theatrical poster.
The revised design, after the original poster art was attacked for being a rip-off (and not the homage Spike claimed) of Saul BassAnatomy of a Murder design.
Saul Bass‘ iconic cut up design for the Otto Preminger/Jimmy Stewart classic.

With his deeply empathetic and compassionate portrayal of protagonist Strike’s older brother, Victor, Washington showed us a complicated, burnt-out family man, who commits the murder Strike doesn’t have the stomach for, literally and figuratively (Chocolate Moo!, anyone?), as the desperate act of man at the end of his tether. And while the part of Beechum, as written, is much less complex than that of Victor in Clockers (Beechum may have been a more interesting character had the writers created a credible, or at least, reasonable doubt as to his innocence), Washington’s performance supplies whatever layers the character is missing on paper.

Eastwood (L) with Sydney Poitier (R), daughter of another great Hollywood icon, Sidney Poitier.

Especially effective in True Crime is the slow-burn manner in which Eastwood’s Everett, now “sober as a judge,” takes up the cause that Beecham may, in fact, be innocent. It’s not what his editors want to hear. Everett’s article is only meant to be a side-bar, a “human interest” piece, not an exposé on an impending miscarriage of justice.

Washington (L) with Lisa Gay Hamilton (R) (Jackie Brown, The Truth About Charlie), excellent as always, playing Beecham’s traumatized wife.

What begins solely out of a sense of guilt and responsibility to his dead colleague and friend (and would-be paramour), slowly deepens from curiosity to crusade, as Everett becomes Beecham’s final (and only) hope for clemency in a desperate race against time.

A slightly misleading publicity still with that Dirty Harry, Gran Torino vibe.

Frankly, I don’t give a rat’s ass about Jesus Christ. I don’t care about justice in this world, or the next. I don’t care what’s right or wrong. Never have. But you know what this is? That’s my nose. To tell you a pitiful truth, that’s all I have. When my nose tells me something stinks, I gotta have faith in it, just like you have faith in Jesus.”

-Clint Eastwood to Isaiah Washington in True Crime.
“Your usual-usual? Or your new-usual?”
Aged lothario.

Everett may be a callous, shallow, journalistic has-been, and (only recently) ex-drunk, who’s sleeping with his put-upon editor’s (Denis Leary) wife seemingly out of spite, and claims his only interest in Beecham is in getting a juicy story, not in the noble pursuit of justice for a wrongly imprisoned man about to be put to death, but he risks way too much in his life and career to save Beecham from the needle for us to believe his apathy. And with no time to spare! The looming execution is scheduled for midnight.

It is a testament to the skill of Eastwood, the director, his screenwriters, Brickman (Risky Business); Schiff (Oliver Stone’s Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps), and Gross (Walter Hill’s 48 Hrs), and long-time editor, Joel Cox (Unforgiven; Richard Jewell), that True Crime never lets up on the tension of the ticking clock that is Beecham’s coming execution. Essentially the B-story to Everett’s investigation, Beecham’s last day on earth is a harrowing, gut wrenching, heartbreaking one.

Gay Hamilton in a moment of great anguish as her husband is led to his execution.

In its detailing of the hours, minutes, and seconds leading up to the state killing, the film sneaks up on the audience, who have been lulled by the leisurely pace of the first few prison scenes into forgetting that time is very quickly running out, and soon there will be none left.

“Like the sands through the hourglass, so are the “Days of Our Lives…“

Eastwood and Cox use repeated inserts of a clock on the prison wall to remind us of the fact that time is short, but we don’t really need them.

Protesters gather outside the prison walls.
Beechum, keeping his fear to himself.

As the protesters gather outside the prison, and those around Beecham, or connected somehow to the case, become more desperate, solemn, panicked, blood-thirsty, etc., we know that poor Frank is really not long for this world.

Even his exhausted, well meaning lawyer runs out of all hope when his final appeal is denied and Beechum refuses to accept the only lifeline left open to him: He could save his own life, she tells him, if only he would admit his guilt and show remorse for the heinous killing.

But that would mean Beecham’s young daughter growing up believing that her father was a murderer. Beecham would rather die than be seen as a killer in his baby’s eyes.

Beecham’s daughter may be more of a story device than a fully fleshed out character, but as devices go, her presence is effective on two fronts.

Not the call he was hoping for.

First, Beechum’s undeniable love for her, evident in his patience and kindness towards her, and his choice to die an innocent man rather than live with her thinking him a guilty one, goes a long way towards creating audience affection for him, and making us invest more into Everett’s investigation into Beechum’s possible, then likely, innocence. No decent human being wants to see an innocent child deprived of a loving parent.

Bernard Hill as the warden.
Search…
And rescue!
Roger that.

It also allows us to see the prison staff as actual human beings, rather than just a bunch of needle-happy executioners when, in one particularly heartwarming sequence, the warden deploys what appears to be a full-scale bomb squad search of Mrs. Beechum’s vehicle, not because there have been any threats made against her, but to find the little girl’s missing green crayon, which she needs to draw the green pastures where her daddy tells her he is going. In a lesser director’s hands, with less-skilled performers than Washington, Gay Hamilton, and Bernard Hill (as the sympathetic, but duty-bound warden), this scene could have been terminally cute and unbearably sentimental.

But Eastwood’s hand as a director in this scene, and throughout the picture, is as subtle, and honest, as ever, and we never feel that we are simply being manipulated into a short cut to caring for Beechum.

There is no doubt about the pain and fear in Washington’s eyes, but his behaviour is never anything less than completely controlled. He bottles his turbulent emotions for the benefit of his wife and daughter, and to retain whatever dignity that six years of wrongful incarceration have yet to strip away from him.

An ill-advised father-daughter outing at the Oakland Zoo.

The second manner in which the inclusion of Beechum’s daughter proves to be a smart choice is in the opportunity it creates to contrast Everett’s own parenting. Where Beechum is attentive, and invested in his relationship with his little girl, Everett is anything but. Spending time with her is an obligation, an item simply needing to be scratched off his overly cluttered to-do list.

“Speed zoo!”
“We go fast!”
And crash!
The infamous (and heavily memed) “No wire hangers ever!” scene in Mommie Dearest.

It’s unusual in a legal thriller for one of the most harrowing and anxiety-inducing sequences to centre around bad parenting, but the game of “speed zoo” that Everett inflicts upon his daughter, about the same age as Beechum’s, qualifies as some of the worst on-screen parenting that we have seen since Faye Dunaway went batshit crazy over wire-hangers in her Joan Crawford biopic, Mommie Dearest (1981).

Eastwood (L) & Washington (R).

Everett and Beecham finally meet at about the film’s halfway point, when Everett arrives at San Quentin to interview Beecham on the precipice of his execution.

Convinced now of Beecham’s innocence, Everett races against the clock, tracking down leads…

But the potato chips!
Early appearance by Lucy Liu.

Interviews witnesses…

Eastwood’s ex-flame, Frances Fisher.
Coleman Domingo (L) in one of his first on-screen appearances.

Follows clues…

Annoys his editors…

Diane Venora (Heat) plays Everett’s long-suffering wife.

And tries (and fails) to appease his neglected wife and daughter by squeezing in some quality family time (the disasterous zoo sequence)…

As the death hour fast approaches.

And because this is the kind of movie where we know all of our questions are going to be answered before the end credits roll, Everett, of course, gets to the truth before the fatal needle can be administered, and we learn, in flashback, what really happened in the convenience store that fateful, awful day.

Japanese advert.

In the end, it’s no longer just a juicy story for Everett. He finally realizes that he isn’t just on a quest to save Beecham’s life, but to save his own, too. Everett’s story proves to be a lifeline for both men. There lives will never again intersect, but they will both be forever changed because they once crossed paths.

Eastwood in his Oscar-winning western, Unforgiven.
Early theatrical poster for Unforgiven (1992).

In the end, True Crime doesn’t offer up many surprises, or re-invent the genre the way Clint did with the American Western in his most beloved film, 1992’s Best Picture-winner, Unforgiven, but this film’s charm is actually in how fully it delivers on what we have come to expect from an old-fashioned investigative thriller, something which fewer and fewer entries in the genre seem capable of doing.

The Firm, First Edition.
John Grisham, king of legal thrillers.

True Crime is no more, but certainly no less, successful in realizing its (admittedly) modest ambitions than the kind of popcorn mysteries that made John Grisham adaptations (probably the closest corollary films) so popular in the 1990s.

It’s not as good as Sydney Pollack’s take on The Firm (1993), or Coppola’s underrated Matt Damon vehicle, The Rainmaker (1997), but it’s better than Alan J. Pakula’s mounting of The Pelican Brief (1993), a lot better than James Foley’s dreadful waste of Gene Hackman, The Chamber (1996), and pretty much holds its own against The Client (1994), and A Time To Kill (1996), the pair of Grisham adaptations that Joel Schumacher directed between his franchise-stalling Batman sequels, Batman Forever (1995), and Batman & Robin (1997).

Stop fucking Bob’s wife. He doesn’t like it.

-James Woods to Clint Eastwood in “True Crime

One of True Crime’s greatest pleasures is the embarrassment of riches that comprise its overqualified supporting cast.

James Woods and Denis Leary as Everett’s long-suffering bosses.
Michael McKean as Reverend “Shit-For-Brains.”
Michael Jeter enjoys his 15 minutes of fame.

Bit parts that might otherwise be populated by unknown faces in a typical film of this sort are played here by the likes of Michael McKean (Spinal Tap, Better Call Saul), as a pushy priest, James Woods (Salvador, Casino), as Eastwood’s frustrated publisher, Denis Leary (Monument Ave, Rescue Me), as his cuckolded editor, Bob, Michael Jeter (The Fisher King), as an overzealous witness, and Bernard Hill (Titanic, Lord of the Rings), as the kind warden.

Eastwood directs Washington and Gay Hamilton in an emotion moment of separation by one of the prison guards.

And as always, there is the assured, subtle, deceptively effortless direction by the film’s star. Because Eastwood directs himself, famously gives little in the way of verbal instruction to his actors, and because there is nothing flashy about his visual style, always opting for as few set-ups as possible to convey the story he’s telling, the intelligence of his shot choices, the considered rhythms of his pacing, and the uniform consistency of the performances in his films are often over-looked outside of those periods in his legendary and uniquely lengthy career where he has found himself suddenly back in fashion.

Another legend of cinema, Robert Altman.

Clint is a little like another American auteur that way. It was the late, great, Robert Altman (The Player, Short Cuts) who ascribed his waxing and waning popularity through the decades to the circular whims of fashion.

1992’s The Player resurrected Altman’s lagging career.
1993’s Short Cuts re-established his reputation as one of America’s leading auteurs.
1994’s Pret-A-Porter did not.
Spanish theatrical “awards” poster.

And though this period of Eastwood’s career, from Absolute Power (1997) to Bloodwork (2002), saw him mostly out of critical and commercial favour, he would soon be back in fashion with the overrated but widely adored Million Dollar Baby (2004).

Theatrical poster.
Sergio Leone’s The Man With No Name trilogy blu-ray collection.
Clint and two of his Oscars.

This year he’s back in awards contention once more, at 93-years-old, for 2024’s Juror #2. The one-time Man With No Name may not have taken his last turn on the merry go-round of Oscar-glory just yet.

Shot For Shot: The Crash

Tom Cruise (L), Nicole Kidman (R), and Ron Howard (C), promote 1992’s Far and Away in the now defunct US edition of Premiere Magazine, a young cinephile’s dream.

As an avid young cinephile of about 11 years old, I talked my parents into allowing me a subscription to Premiere Magazine. Though it survives today in a French-only format, the English-language US publication I came of age with is now defunct. In the form that I encountered it, Premiere was a glossy film-school-in-a-magazine that taught me so much about filmmaking and filmmakers that I can scarcely disentangle its influence in shaping my tastes during those formative film-watching years from the films themselves.

Glen Kenney’s reviews were second in my heart only to Roger Ebert’s, who was, even then, my favourite critic.

My absolute favourite feature in Premiere Magazine was its ongoing series Shot By Shot. I most vividly recall the photo spread on the bus-jumping-the-highway-gap scene in 1992’s Keanu Reeves/Sandra Bullock-breakout, Speed. It is in the spirit of that series, and that article, that I offer the following argument for Eastwood as a genuine auteur: The crash scene from True Crime:

Eyes not on the road.

Distracted by the radio.

Fixing her lipstick.

Checking it twice.

Ignoring the treacherous conditions.

Accelerating at speed.

Reduced visibility / blurred vision.

Losing traction.

Out of control.

Hitting the rail.

Spinning the wheel in vain.

Struggling to see.

A view of impending collision.

A Hail Mary swerve.

Slamming on the brake.

Throwing up her hands.

Quiet after the storm.

The aftermath.

As a special treat to kick off this inaugural post for the new series:

The Filmography Presents: Bjorn’s Take:

Eastwood double fists Oscars.

“True Crime (1999) comes at an interesting period for Clint Eastwood, one of a number of “workhorse” eras where he was between periods of outsized critical and cultural recognition.

For me, this falls in with a number of somewhat interchangeable two-word title vehicles that he cranked out between his most broadly adored film, the Oscar-feted Unforgiven (1992), and his second period of near-universal acclaim, earmarked by Mystic River (2003) and Million Dollar Baby (2004), a pair of films I find mildly and majorly overrated, respectively.

I didn’t bother with True Crime when it was first released, nor was my interest adequately piqued by the similar (and similarly titled) cranky-old-guy-on-a-crusade pictures that bookended it, Absolute Power (1997), and Blood Work (2002).

I did, however, take a chance on Space Cowboys (2000), a paleolithic dad-movie that’s one of his poorest directorial efforts.

P.T. Anderson and some of his films.

Yet man can not live on Paul Thomas Anderson movies alone, and the 21st century auteurists finally aroused my interest sufficiently to delve deeper.

Eastwood’s 2024 drama Juror #2.

It’s kind of amazing to realise that Eastwood, a man who directed a widely-acclaimed movie in 2024 (Juror#2), was already three years past conventional retirement age when he made True Crime. Not that he acknowledges it here, as his Steve Everett, a Samuel Fuller-style old school newspaperman, has a wife in her 30s, a mistress in her 20s, and a daughter barely out of diapers. Everett smokes indoors, enjoys a hearty glass of whisky, and brawls (verbally, but with a definite undercurrent of fisticuffs) with his editors. But he also knows an injustice when he sees it, and he spends most of True Crime trying to prove the innocence of death row inmate Frank Beechum (played by Spike Lee regular Isaiah Washington).

Theatrical poster for Eastwood’s Coogan’s Bluff.

True Crime is the stuff of formula, but it’s a formula that’s worked for Eastwood since Coogan’s Bluff (1968): A tough, no-nonsense figure rights the wrongs of injustice, causing carnage both physical and emotional along the way.

Eastwood’s mythical gunslinger gets his own Barbie-doll treatment.
Eastwood (L) with his cinematic mentor, the late, great director of tough-as-nails action pictures, Don Siegel, on location for their Dirty Harry (1971).

It seems important to Eastwood to have disassociated himself from the amoral “Man With No Name” once he established himself as the kind of actor who wanted to call his own shots every step of the way, perhaps because of his own personal, very prominent own moral compass, but also as a compliment to his directing mentor, the great Don Siegel, who explored similar themes in his own work.

Japanese advert.

True Crime is mostly a ticking-clock kind of movie, with Everett running around the Bay Area in his beat-up Mustang, as the possibility of clemency for his condemned inmate dwindles.

He does take a few moments for some quality time with his daughter – racing around the San Francisco Zoo in a truly unhinged sequence – and attempts to mend his broken relationships, but this is mostly a movie with one purpose in mind: solving a mystery to save a man’s life.

Eastwood infamously addresses an empty chair as if it were President Obama, as at the 2012 Republican National Convention, August 30, 2012.

For a lot of True Crime I was wondering to myself what noted Republican Eastwood thought of the death penalty. During his most politically cranky period in the Obama-era, he claimed to be vehemently in favour, but it’s hard to reconcile that with this movie’s suspense being largely derived from the possibility of an innocent man being put to death. Eastwood might suggest that bad investigative practices, and the same sort of bureaucracy that Insp. Harry Callahan would butt heads with, are to blame, and that it’s up to good people to do right. Whether or not that means we should all be invetigating cold cases in our space time, True Crime does not make evident.

The upshot is that Eastwood is as watchable and complelling as ever, and the psychological stability of his on-screen exemplar is never definite. That’s one of things things I always find most interesting about Eastwood’s personality-driven projects, and something I look forward to invetigating deeper as we dive into his work.”

Bjorn Olson, guest contributor, is the co-host of The Filmography podcast, which just wrapped its second season. Season 3 is launching soon!