Director Clint Eastwood has helmed fourteen movies since hitting the age of 70. Has any director come close to that feat at this late stage in their career? Yes, Woody Allen‘s nearly been there thirteen films post-70, but Eastwood is still making hyper relevant films at the near twilight of his career and sometime breaking the box office in the process with something like “American Sniper.” Case in point his last two films: ‘Sniper‘ and “Sully,” both of which had the classicism of old-school Hollywood filmmaking, and yet, felt vitally alive and current. The resonant theme that binded both was the cost of hero worship. Both films have male characters who feel isolated and flawed, despite being deemed heroes by those around them.
It looks like “The 15:17 to Paris,” will be treading that line as well. Eastwood is currently busy these days shooting the aforementioned film, which is based on the true story of the three American students who stopped a terrorist attack two years ago in Paris. But in the ballsiest twist in recent mainstream filmmaking, the 87-year-old director has decided to screw conventional Hollywood casting and tapped the actual three real-life American students who stopped the terrorist on the train as the leads of the film. A risk that has had people talking, but it seems like Eastwood saw something in these young men that made him believe he could pull this off. My advice? Trust Clint. Also Eastwood really gives zero fucks these days so he probably doesn’t care anyhow.
Meanwhile, according to Variety‘s Kris Tapley, the film will breezily be ready for an Awards-Season release in December. The astonishing part of all this is that Eastwood only started shooting the film this summer, but he’s already known for his fast-paced under-the-radar productions. A prime example would be “Million Dollar Baby” in 2004, which wrapped up shooting in the summer and then had a very limited release in December just to qualify for Oscar. We all know how that turned out: the film won Best Picture and Clint nabbed his second Best Director prize. Now it’s all a matter if Warner Bros. wants to put it out in December or not.
In a career that spans more than 50 years in the director’s chair, Eastwood keeps honing his craft with the classicism he learned from his mentors Sergio Leone and Don Siegel, as Time’s late great film critic Richard Corliss said, he makes it seem “as if the story is telling itself.” Who else can pull off that kind of classic simplicity these days? To say we’re looking forward to “The 15:17 to Paris” would be an understatement.
What a great master filmmaker. What a legendary icon. I can’t wait to see his upcoming movies. so happy to have him alive and healthy so he can pull the trigger every time he makes a movie.
Manoel de Oliveira directed 26 movies between ages 70 and 106 (not including shorts and documentaries), both Eastwood and Allen have quite a long way to go.
No doubt, Oliveira comes to mind. He was a whole other beast.
Good Lord. Another mediocre middlebrow Eastwood movie. Clint Please Retire!!!!
can’t remember the last thoroughly good movie Clint Eastwood made..
Letters from Iwo Jima, maybe?
This. Amen. I mean, post-Letters, I guess American Sniper is the only solid one. (Gran Torino is garbage. That screenplay alone…let alone the horrible acting from everyone except Clint….) But Sully was awful. Thankfully, the Academy isn’t falling for his bland shit these days.
This sounds horrendously bland, and wooden acting failed for Gran Torino so I doubt three non-actors are gonna make it work with Eastwood’s one-or-two-takes process. I’m sure it’ll be a seamless production, but the quality of his work has plummeted tremendously. I can’t see this being in the Oscar mix beyond some tech categories.
BUT no doubt the National Board of Review will be primed with their ~eastwoodies~ and award him or the film something undeserved. 😀