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Clint Eastwood

1 Clint Eastwood Film Gave Tom Hanks a Bad Reputation Due To a Long List of Hilarious Coincidences

The actor is known to be one of the most influential actors in the world and his Forrest Gump character is an iconic role that people still remember. Hanks has also appeared in movies including Saving Private Ryan, Catch Me If You Can, The Post, etc. One thing that critics and audiences often point out and joke about, is the fact that his chosen films often invited doomed journeys and travel-related plots.
Tom Hanks in Sully

Tom Hanks in Sully
Critics joked about Tom Hanks’ film choices after Sully
Tom Hanks appeared in the 2016 biographical drama movie Sully based on the 2009 autobiography Highest Duty by Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger and Jeffrey Skiles. It was directed by Clint Eastwood and follows Sully’s quick act of emergency landing of US Airway Flight 1549 on the Hudson River in January 2009. The flight had about 155 passengers and crew who survived and suffered minor injuries.
The movie received positive responses from the critics and the audience with people appreciating the performances of the actors. The movie was also caught up in a controversy with its fictionalized portrayal of the NTSB as being prosecutorial and closed-minded. However, Sully was picked as one of the best movies of 2016 and garnered a lot of attention at the time.
The situation took an interesting and funny turn when critics started to draw a pattern with Tom Hanks’ choices of movies and dubbed him as someone dangerous to travel with. According to a film critic for the Washington Post, Hanks’ movie choices make it clear that he does not have a safe track record when it comes to traveling.
Tom Hanks Tom Hanks
His other travel movies include Apollo 13 in which the actor travels to space but after an explosion, spends the entire movie trying to get back home alive. 2000’s Cast Away in which the actor boards a plane that crashes into the Pacific Ocean and ends up spending four years on the remote island. Next was Road to Perdition in which Tom Hanks is in a car chase followed by The Terminal in which he lives at the airport terminal for nine months after the United States does not recognize his passport.
Hanks also appeared in Captain Phillips in which he is the captain of the unnamed container ship, which gets hijacked. Chris Lee for the LA Times wrote,
“Often overlooked in the star’s nearly 60 film oeuvre, however, is a recurrent theme of foiled plans and unreached destinations, of crash landing and turbulent seas, of interrupted journeys and uncertain repatriation.”
The critic further wrote that what was so interesting to note was that many of Hanks’ movies have him play a character that sets off on a trip but does not get where he is going. He also mentioned that the audience just doesn’t get tired of watching stories about Hanks’ failed travels.
Tom Hanks says he was honored to play a real-life hero in Sully
Clint Eastwood’s Sully may have given the actor a bad reputation for picking travel tragic movies but he says he was honored to play a real-life hero in the movie. Hanks shared that he indeed met with Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger who had to battle to prove that the emergency landing was not caused by the pilot error.
Tom Hanks and Aaron EckhartTom Hanks and Aaron Eckhart
Hanks upon meeting Sully said via Female First,
“I think heroes are people who voluntarily put themselves in harm’s way. And by that criteria you could say that anybody that puts themselves in an airplane for a living and cheats death somehow.”
Tom Hanks continued that Sully was able to utilize his instinct and expertise that came from 40 years of experience for which there is no substitute. It’s extraordinary and he feels honored to have played him on-screen.

Clint Eastwood

The Netflix Clint Eastwood Thriller That’s Still An A+ In Suspense

Clint Eastwood movie


In the Line of Fire is the story of a Secret Service agent named Frank Horrigan who suffers from severe PTSD stemming from his inability to stop a murder when he was younger. Failing to save anyone would be traumatizing, but Frank didn’t let “anyone” get killed. It was the JFK assassination that he failed to stop.
When an ex-CIA agent calling himself Booth (after John Wilkes) makes it known that he plans to kill the current president, Horrigan begs to be put on active duty again. The middle-aged secret service agent wants a chance to make up for not saving Kennedy by making sure this president doesn’t get taken out. What follows is a tense back and forth as Booth continuously contacts Horrigan to tease him about letting John F. Kennedy get shot as Frank attempts to locate and stop the would-be assassin.

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Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood’s Co-star Was Poisoned, Strangled, and Nearly Decapitated While Filming Iconic 1966 Western

Clint Eastwood is one of Hollywood’s most masterful and skilled directors, but that doesn’t mean he hasn’t acted in several iconic films as well. This included his legendary role as Blondie in The Good, The Bad and The Ugly. Unfortunately, one of his co-stars in the film suffered a lot during the filming process and almost lost his life.
Clint Eastwood has also been part of other iconic films such as Dirty Harry,  A Fistful of Dollars and many more. That said, there is no doubt just how dedicated he has been to all of his films so far in his career.

Cool outlaw with cigarette

Clint Eastwod in The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Clint Eastwood’s Co-star In The Good, The Bad and The Ugly Suffered Many Unfortunate Mishaps During Shooting
Clint Eastwood’s The Good, The Bad and The Ugly(1966) stands as the quintessential spaghetti western epic, with actor Eli Wallach delivering a memorable performance that made him an icon in films. However, behind the scenes, Wallach faced many dangerous situations that brought him close to life-threatening incidents. One such instance involved a misfired stunt with a horse, which dragged him dangerously across the set.

Sussy manEli Wallach before his near-death experience

The truly death-defying scene unfolded as Wallach’s character tried to use a passing locomotive to break the chain of handcuffs after escaping a POW camp. The train, equipped with low steel steps overlooked during planning, was nothing short of death. During the scene, Wallach, chained to a soldier he had just killed, found himself in a life-threatening situation as the lowered metal steps on the oncoming train were dangerously close to decapitating him.
In another instance, Wallach was almost poisoned during shooting when he accidentally drank from a bottle of acid that a film technician had set next to his soda bottle – something that no one was aware of at the time.
In yet another near-mishap, Wallach’s character was supposed to be hanged, and the horse beneath him was intended to bolt in response to a pistol being fired. However, the execution of the scene didn’t go as planned. The horse instead galloped for about a mile with Wallach still mounted and his hands bound behind his back – strangling him and almost killing him in the process.
Clint Eastwood Didn’t Initially Want To Do The Film
By the mid-1960s, Clint Eastwood had already established himself in the Western genre and was seeking new challenges in his career. When initially asked to appear in the film, he declined for several reasons.

Iconic staredownClint Eastwood and Eli Wallach

One factor was Eastwood’s disappointment in sharing the screen with two established actors, Eli Wallach and Lee Van Cleef. He wasn’t happy about Wallach’s character being given the best dialogues. On top of that, Eastwood was offered lesser pay, as his status as a major star in the United States wasn’t really established then.
Thankfully, the producers were eager to have Eastwood on board for the film. Therefore, they offered him a $250,000 salary, 10% of the profits and a new Ferrari 275 GTB. In the end, Eastwood accepted and the rest is history.

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Clint Eastwood

Caped Clint Eastwood? Raquel Welsh? These famous actors were almost Superman and Lois Lane

It’s a bird . . . It’s a plane . . . It’s Dirty Harry?
Forty-five years after dashing newcomer Christopher Reeve’s caped flight to stardom in 1978’s “Superman” movie, a NYC auction house is listing rare documents revealing the other leading men the studio cleared to be cast in the iconic role, including Clint Eastwood, Jack Nicholson, Robert Wagner and then-closeted Richard Chamberlain.
Auction house Metropolis Collectibles revealed the names of 24 leading men and 23 actresses DC Comics officially approved to be Superman/Clark Kent and Lois Lane, characters ultimately played by the relatively unknown 26-year-old Juilliard alum Reeve, and established 30-year-old Margot Kidder.
“This has been a well-loved topic over the years and for the first time we have confirmation” about the approved list of actors “DC was comfortable with, as far as their public image,” said J.R. Taylor, a researcher for Metropolis. “The casting has always been the most talked about thing and this list has names no one ever knew before.”

Margot Kidder and Christopher Reeve, seen here in costume as Superman flies the reporter through the air, ultimately won the roles of Lois Lane and Superman.

10Margot Kidder and Christopher Reeve ultimately won the roles of Lois Lane and Superman.©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection
The celebs who coulda been contenders were:
CLINT EASTWOOD:

Clint Eastwood in the 1966 film "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly."10Clint Eastwood in the 1966 film “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly.”Courtesy Everett Collection
The caped crusader with a deadly squint?
“A lot of actors probably weren’t thrilled at the idea of playing Superman. This was a time when starring in a comic book movie certainly sounded like a risky proposition,” said Taylor.
ROBERT WAGNER:

Robert Wagner headshot10Robert Wagner was known more for his roles in television.Courtesy Everett Collection
The veteran actor and husband of Natalie Wood (whose name was on the list for Lois Lane) would have been 48 when the movie premiered on Dec. 15,1978.
“At that point he was a television actor,” said Taylor.
JACK NICHOLSON:

Jack Nicholson in "Chinatown."10Jack Nicholson as Jake Gittes in the 1974 film “Chinatown.”Courtesy Everett Collection
The “Chinatown” actor and “Cuckoo’s Nest” Oscar winner with the unnerving grin would ultimately go on to play the Joker in 1989’s “Batman.”
But he was no obvious Superman, said Taylor.
“You can see DC probably was considering nothing more than people who they considered to be bankable” stars, but he would have brought “baggage” from his previous eccentric roles.
MARLON BRANDO:

Marlon Brando in "The Godfather."10Marlon Brando in “The Godfather.”Courtesy Everett Collection
The brooding bad boy ended up playing Superman’s father Jor-El, despite Brando famously trying to convince producers that the role should be portrayed by a green suitcase.
“His logic being that if they were aliens, there’s no way of knowing what Superman’s father really looked like, perhaps hoping to be paid for voiceover work,” said Taylor.
RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN:

Richard Chamberlain in 1974's "The Towering Inferno."10Richard Chamberlain in 1974’s “The Towering Inferno.”©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection
“He’s the only actor on the list, besides Rock Hudson, who’d have been a closeted gay actor in the part,” said Taylor.
RAQUEL WELCH:

raquel welch in a orange bra and underwear in 196710Sex symbol Raquel Welch wouldn’t have been believable as Lois Lane.©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection
Not in “one million years” could people see the international sex symbol as the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Daily Planet” reporter.
Though the sexy starlet went on to star as vampy villain Diana Pride in the TV series “Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman” in 1995.
SUE LYON:

Sue Lyon in 1962's "Lolita."10Sue Lyon in 1962’s “Lolita.”Courtesy Everett Collection
“This is probably the biggest surprise here,” said Taylor of the starlet who found overnight fame in the title role of 1962’s “Lolita,” but who “relied on drive-in movies and small TV turns by the time of Superman’s production.”
JANE SEYMOUR:

Jane Seymour in 2005's "Wedding Crashers."10Jane Seymour in 2005’s “Wedding Crashers.”©New Line Cinema/Courtesy Everett Collection
The former “Live and Let Die” Bond girl later turned up in the Superman series “Smallville” on The CW and named one of her children after her close friend Christopher Reeve, said Taylor.

NATALIE WOOD AND SISTER LANA WOOD:

Natalie Wood, left, and her sister, Lana Wood, in the 1960s.10Natalie Wood, left, and her sister, Lana Wood, in the 1960s.Courtesy Everett Collection

“Natalie’s name has come up, but no one’s ever mentioned her sister Lana, primarily known as a ‘Bond girl,’ being approved for the role,” said Taylor.

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