The Star Malaysia - Star2

He just wants to work

-

MOVIE legend Clint Eastwood turned 90 on May 31. But don’t count on the famously stoic and hard-working star of A Fistful Of Dollars and Dirty Harry to hang up his cowboy boots just yet. The multiple Oscar-winning actor-turned-diwho rector, churned out nine films in his 80s, has expressed no desire to retire ahead of the milestone – andinany case, he’s not a fan of birthdays.

“We’re just going to do a family thing – very, very calm, very mellow,” his 34-year-old actor son Scott told Access Hollywood.

“We’ll sneak a cake in there, definitely. He probably won’t like it.”

Eastwood, born in 1930, has enjoyed a career spanning seven decades and more than 50 films.

He last trod the Hollywood red carpet as recently as November, for his Olympic bombing biopic Richard Jewell.

It was released to mixed reviews – and sparked a backlash over its fictional depiction of a real-life female journalist trading sex for FBI secrets.

But Eastwood’s career has weathered greater controvers­y, from accusation­s of excessive violence in the spaghetti Western Dollars trilogy, fascism in Dirty

Harry and warmongeri­ng in American Sniper, to his portrayal of racism in Gran Torino.

As well as Oscars for Unforgiven and Million Dollar Baby, and a lifetime achievemen­t Palme d’or from the Cannes festival, Eastwood’s back catalogue also contains a few critically savaged flops.

“I would like to think it rolls off his back... he’s gotten beat up along the way pretty regularly,” Variety senior vice president Tim Gray said.

“I think he’s going to keep working as long as he can... he seems to have a creative drive that keeps him going.”

Known on the Hollywood circuit as polite but reticent as far as small talk or personal details, Eastwood has hinted at future projects, but had not yet confirmed any plans before the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down all production­s in March.

In a January interview with Britain’s ITV, Eastwood indicated he was still enjoying plying his trade. “I like doing it, it’s nice to be able to have a paying job,” he told This Morning.

“I like being in films, I like making films and I started directing films because I thought one day I’m going to look up on screen and say, ‘That’s enough, Eastwood – you’d better do something else’.”

In other interviews, he has expressed confusion as to why luminaries such as Billy Wilder and Frank Capra quit the business at a younger age, and spoken of his desire to keep working as long as he finds projects that are “worth studying.”

Despite previously announcing his retirement from acting after 2008’s Gran Torino, Eastwood returned in front of camera four years later in Trouble With The Curve, and again in 2018’s The Mule.

“He’s pretty unpredicta­ble,” said Gray, adding: “I get the feeling now, he does what he wants to do.” – AFP

 ??  ?? eastwood posing with his Oscars for Best director and Best Picture for Million Dollar Baby in this 2005 filepic. — ap
eastwood posing with his Oscars for Best director and Best Picture for Million Dollar Baby in this 2005 filepic. — ap

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia