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#1641 |
Senior Member
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I was just thinking about the "rambling cowpoke" accent he developed for this movie and how he's basically been using it ever since. Or was it Crazy Heart where he did it first? I can't remember. Either way, his "fill your hands" reading makes me cringe every single time I've ever watched the True Grit remake. Every. Single. Time. I don't care if anybody thinks Wayne was a national treasure or the worst thespian to ever call himself an "actor," there's no way that Bridges bettered his performance. Sure, the performance is different, but not better. The rest of the film, though, I find up for debate (as I already said).
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Thanks given by: | ThePreacher (01-04-2020) |
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#1642 | |
Banned
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#1647 |
Banned
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This. Clint Easywood is beyond stale acting. They hosed Morgan Freeman in this also. He had more action as Robin Hood’s sidekick.
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Thanks given by: | ThePreacher (01-05-2020) |
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#1648 |
Banned
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I guess revisionist, introspective Westerns that look for the real man in myth and legend are just not everyone's cup of tea.
I will agree though that Eastwood is one of the most overally revered American directors. Most of his film's are bland. But Unforgiven is one of the few gems he's got. |
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#1649 | |
Senior Member
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I know you didn't mention Wayne, but he's somewhat relevant to this discussion about Eastwood and westerns (not to mention True Grit). Perhaps most importantly, both men have gotten criticism over the years for their stock personae and perceived lack of range in their films. I don't think that Eastwood (or Wayne) are stale at all, they just play particular kinds of characters. And I think the appeal speaks for itself. "Stale" or not, I can't picture anyone else as Harry Callahan, nor the Man With No Name. And really, if we're opening the discussion up, there are plenty of performers that fall into the same categories as Eastwood and Wayne: Schwarzenegger, Stallone, Seagal, Van Damme, etc. The '80s action crop is really no different, they just specialized in a genre that's adjacent to the western as that's what was popular at the time. Same goes for every other era. |
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Thanks given by: | Radioactive (01-05-2020) |
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#1650 | |
Banned
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Need to be careful not to stray into false equivalency between the Action and Western genre. The Action genre has never reached and, probably never will reach the objective culture vaule the Western has had on cinema. An Ox Bow Incident moment.
Still, while indeed you have your... The Western has attracted the best talents from direction to acting and everything in between. Again, the action genre has not. |
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#1651 | |
Senior Member
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EDIT: Randolph Scott was my grandfather's favorite actor and that gag is one of my absolute favorite film moments of all-time. |
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Thanks given by: | Scottishguy (01-04-2020) |
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#1652 |
Banned
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I wasn't trying to put you on the defensive, or questioning the validity of what you are saying. It's just I like to make a point of warning aganist being to heavy with genre conflation. Film's as is art in general far from rigid. But we humans instincively apply order even where order is not possible. To categorise things for not so much our individual understanding, but collective.
Really we are just tossing semantic pancakes up in the air. Every pancake is diffrent, unique. I think the most important thing is we can have these discussions, as circular as they may be. And without full agreement. It's the people who try and shut them down that I worry about, and detest the most. As somehow they have the monopoly on art and film. Like Normac. Last edited by Scottishguy; 01-04-2020 at 10:51 PM. |
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#1653 |
Blu-ray Baron
Jun 2008
Dry County
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![]() 46 and 1/2 years old. God, Tombstone is awful. I had to sit through it once and once was too much. |
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#1654 | |
Banned
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I still say Eastwood is worse than all of em. Even...*gasp*...Seagal. Lol |
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#1656 |
Senior Member
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I was merely playing devil's advocate with that list. Save for Seagal (who is comes across as smugly self-satisfied and little more), I think they've all had moments of pure greatness onscreen, the limiting factor for folks like Schwarzenegger and Van Damme being that their accents and obvious struggle with certain dialogue in English makes it seem as though they're "bad." Of course, Stallone is generally the "exception" because of Rocky, but I digress. As I said, I like them all.
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#1657 | |
Banned
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I think Stallone is great. I like the others generally....except Eastwood. F that dude. lol |
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#1659 | |
Banned
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Clint Eastwood is admittedly not a great "actor", but he's a good movie star and has great screen presence. At least in his heyday. I can't really say he brought much to Trouble With The Curve or The Mule. I agree with those who say that Unforgiven is a masterpiece though. For me it gets better every time I see it. |
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#1660 | |
Banned
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