I've enjoyed Clint Eastwood movies. A superhero with the answers, double cool, self-sufficient, existing without society, without anyone's help, quiet, a man of few words, few ideas, but lots of action: this was the Eastwood persona. It was partly the real person too. Such was the character of Dirty Harry in the 1973 movie Magnum Force. With this movie Eastwood had become "the undisputed top movie star in the world."1 As I read the book(1) I came to appreciate a man with some fine qualities and a man with his own particular weaknesses. He certainly did not enjoy his celebrity status. It made him uncomfortable.
In 1973 I had moved into a type of celebrity status in my own little world as a high school teacher in South Australia. It was a status I enjoyed as a teacher, off and on, until 1999. If a biography was ever to be written about my life it would reveal, as it did of Eastwood, a man of strengths and weaknesses. I found the celebrity status, the endless talking and listening both in schools and in my private life--as well as other factors--wore me out by century's end. My persona, my personality, my road to success, was the opposite to Eastwood's: people in community, ideas and words, wall to wall for years. -Ron Price with thanks to 1Michael Munn, Clint Eastwood: Hollywood's Loner, Robson Books, London, 1992, p.142.
You made your millions, Clint,
while I got through my career
after a somewhat shakey start.
Your quiet self, superhero persona,
man of action par excellence
took you to the top of the movie tree,
while this man of ideas and words,
endless words, produced poetry
and print with millions of phrases
and sentences on pages
and in relationships
enough to sink a ship.
My ship's ballast,
the ballast of my creativity,
was not the great Hollywood engine,
but an emerging world religion,
the centre of a psych-intellectual life
which drove me, eventually, it seems,
to find poetry everywhere.
Ron Price 16 November 2001 Updated For: Metacritic 18/8/07
More on Clint Eastwood.....Ron Price FALLING INTO LIFE What A Run It’s All Been, Eh Clint?
Several days ago I watched a documentary Clint Eastwood: A Life in Film with its special emphasis on the movies he made and his philosophy of life and of making films. This French doco was screened on SBS in Australia on 6 October 2007 at 1:55 to 3:20 p.m. I made a few notes because I have seen many of Eastwood’s films as an actor and as a director; I had also seen one or two docos about him in previous years and this was a new one for me. I printed out a Wikipedia(internet encyclopedia) outline of his life, gathered my notes from the TV program and after 80+ hours of quasi and semi-gestation I set about to write following prose-poem. -Ron Price, “Section VIII Poetry,” Pioneering Over Four Epochs, 10 October 2007.
As you say, Clint, there is a certain falling into life, fate if you like and trying to make the parts of life come together may be, as you said in your last lines, impossible. And yet we try.
We both got our first big breaks in ’59: you in the TV series Rawhide and me in the early stages of an emerging world religion that had been in Canada for just on 60 years with only 700 members then.
While you were becoming one of those instant international stars back in the ‘60s I was going to uni and trying to work out the enigmas of a bipolar disorder which had no name then—just a lot of trouble, angst and a series of crises that threatened to arrest my life’s unfoldment and blast all hopes which my progress engendered.
I was finishing my career teaching in high schools when Dirty Harry appeared and was settling down into Perth Western Australia when that series of four films finished in 1988.....and what a run those years were for me, too, Clint, me too....
You had your Escape from Alcatraz in ’79 about a real escape back in ’62 when I began my pioneering life and my escape from the normalities of a middle class life. In ’79 I began my escape from BPD, a lifelong journey.
You were redefining yourself as director and I was redefining myself as a writer and poet little by little beginning in the early 1970s. You achieved so much, Clint. I’ve got to take my hat off to you.
Way back to your first marriage in 1953 when the Kingdom of God was getting its kick-start in Chicago, I was in grade four and in love with Susan Gregory: what a run it’s all been, eh Clint, eh?
Ron Price 10 October 2007
Posts: 4 | Location: George Town Tasmania 7253 Australia | Registered: 28 July 2007
5. Dirty Harry - He's mad as hell & he's not gonna take it anymore, punk.
4. Bridges Of Madison County - He's lonely as hell & he's not gonna take it anymore, punk.
3. The Man With No Name series - It's hard to believe that there once a time when the cinematic world did not have a Man With No Name from which all other badass cowboy characters could be measured by, huh?
2. Unforgiven - The man, his gun & his regret.
1. Million Dollar Baby - I genuinely believed that after Unforgiven, there wouldn't be any other films that could top the list of fave Clint Eastwood movies. By the time Eastwood's character in this film tells Hillary Swank's character what the Gaelic "Mo Cuishle" phrase means, I knew that this movie had.
"Criticism is the laziest form of expression ." - some deep dude.
I like that quote about criticism and it is partly true, but, in some ways, criticism can be life-giving. A kindly tongue does help when giving it--so spoke Baha'u'llah a 19th century Iranian and Founder of the Baha'i Faith. I wish you well.-Ron Price, Tasmania
Posts: 4 | Location: George Town Tasmania 7253 Australia | Registered: 28 July 2007