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Clint Eastwood

This Clint Eastwood Movie Almost Made Burt Reynolds Quit Acting: Here’s Why

Burt Reynolds was a highly influential actor who starred in “Gunsmoke,” “The Longest Yard,” “Smokey and the Bandit,” “Hooper,” “Boogie Nights,” and “Cannonball Run II.”
He was voted the world’s No. 1 box office star for five years in a row from 1978 to 1982. Some even consider him a “sex symbol” of that time period. During the 1980s, he was at the absolute peak of his career.
Why did a Clint Eastwood movie almost completely derail Burt Reynolds’ acting career?
In 1984 Reynolds and Eastwood starred in the movie “City Heat” together. The film is a buddy-crime-comedy film.
Burt Reynolds plays Mike Murphy, a private investigator. Meanwhile, Eastwood plays Police Lieutenant Speer. The two were once partners but had a falling out that led them to become bitter enemies. A murder forces the two rivals to come together again.
Burt Reynolds On-Set Accident
According to Den of Geek, Reynolds wrote about his experience on the film and how it was detrimental to his career in his memoir, “But Enough About Me.”
On the very first day of filming, Burt Reynolds was a part of a major incident on-set. There was a fight scene where someone breaks a chair over Reynolds’ head. The prop was supposed to be constructed in a way that it would fall apart easily after barely coming in contact with the actor.
However, the actor working with Reynolds picked up the wrong chair and smacked him with a heavy-duty metal chair instead. He was “caught on the jaw” and had a “blinding headache and ringing in my ears.”

Unfortunately, his jaw was completely lopsided. It was difficult for him to speak and chew, which led him to a liquid diet and rapid weight loss. He took pain pills throughout the project.
It really impacted the next few years of his career. Eventually, he discovered he had a temporomandibular disorder. It has to do with the joint that connects a part of the jaw with the skull. It ultimately impacts balance and sensory perception.
The solution was to realign all his teeth. That wasn’t until all his bottom teeth were sawed off as a first step in finding a solution.
Personal Life and AIDS Rumors
On-screen Reynolds was a funny, playful, and macho character in his widely successful films. Off-screen he had quite a different reputation. He was a playboy, a heavy drinker, a drug addict, a publicly troublesome romantic life, and a pretty gnarly temper.
According to The Washington Post, Burt Reynolds hit director Dick Richards while they were filming “Heat” in 1986. This cost him $500,000 to settle and put him in a bad place with Hollywood executives.
His injury started rumors that he had AIDS. It was at a time when people did not understand what AIDS is as much as we do now. He was heavily medicated and lost more than 60 pounds from his sturdy and strong 200-pound body.
While his jaw condition brought his career down, so did his reckless behavior, personal troubles, and public messy divorce with Hollywood icon Loni Anderson.
His comeback came with the movie “Boogie Nights.”

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Clint Eastwood

Film Trailer for Ennio Morricone Documentary Features Interviews with Clint Eastwood, Quentin Tarantino, & Bruce Springsteen

The trailer for Giuseppe Tornatore’s documentary on the famed Italian film composer Ennio Morricone has been released ahead of its opening in select US theaters on February 9th, 2024. Watch it below.
Titled Ennio, the film traces Morricone’s career from his early work with Sergio Leone to his first Academy Award for Quentin Tarantino’s 2016 movie The Hateful Eight, including The Good, the Bad and the Ugly; Once Upon a Time in America; Days of Heaven; The Mission; and The Untouchables. It also offered the late composer, who died in 2020, an opportunity to tell his own story and break down his artistic process.
Adding to the portrait of Morricone are interviews with several of his collaborators and contemporaries, including Clint Eastwood, Quentin Tarantino, and Bruce Springsteen. Ennio also features appearances from Oliver Stone, Hans Zimmer, John Williams, Bernardo Bertolucci, Marco Bellocchio, Giuliano Montaldo, Dario Argento, Joan Baez, and more.
Morricone and Tornatore shared a long collaborative history, beginning with 1988’s Cinema Paradiso. From there, Morricone went on to write the music for all of Tornatore’s subsequent films, including his Golden Globe-winning score for 1998’s Legend of 1900.
Ennio premiered at the Venice Film Festival in July 2021 before Music Box Films acquired the US distribution rights in November of this year.
See where Morricone’s work landed on our list of the best film scores of the 2010s.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5WBbULw_0U

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Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood, Quentin Tarantino and Bruce Springsteen appear in new Ennio Morricone documentary trailer

Titled Ennio, the movie explores Morricone’s illustrious career, from his early collaborations with Sergio Leone to his Academy Award-winning score for Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight in 2016.
The documentary delves into some of Morricone’s most iconic compositions, including those for The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Once Upon a Time in America, Days of Heaven, The Mission, and The Untouchables.
Released posthumously, the movie allows Morricone, who passed away in 2020 at 91, to finally reveal his own life story and expose the nuances of his artistic process.
In addition to Morricone’s personal insights, Ennio features interviews with famous collaborators, including Clint Eastwood, Quentin Tarantino, and Bruce Springsteen.
The documentary weaves a comprehensive tapestry of Morricone’s singular impact on the world of film scoring, with further contributions from the likes of Oliver Stone, Hans Zimmer, John Williams, Bernardo Bertolucci, Marco Bellocchio, Dario Argento, Joan Baez, and more.
Tornatore, famed for titles such as Malèna and Ennio, has a history with Morricone stretching back to 1988, when they collaborated on the former’s hit movie Cinema Paradiso. Morricone went on to write music for each of Tornatore’s subsequent movies, including his Golden Globe-winning score for Legend of 1900 in 1998.
Watch the trailer for Ennio below. See Far Out‘s recent review of the movie here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5WBbULw_0U

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Clint Eastwood

Despite his tough characters, Clint Eastwood was surprisingly tender

All of this considered you might be surprised that the Rawhide star is actually not so hard-hearted as his characters may have led you to believe. One Eastwood anecdote in The Toronto Star exemplifies this, and comes from his script editor Sonia Chernus, who called Eastwood “the gentlest person I know.” She explained, “He can’t bear to kill anything, including a moth which I asked him to get rid of in my apartment.”
In fact, while he’s usually one of the best shots in the West in many of his productions, Eastwood isn’t too keen on violence and killing. He said of hunting, “I never liked killing things. Some people are taken by it. Maybe it’s the form of masculine expression. I don’t know. I’d be interested in speaking to a psychologist about that.”
Even more confusingly, Eastwood, now known as the quintessential Western man, almost refused to act in his series Rawhide when the opportunity presented itself to him. His reasoning? Because it was a Western, of course.
Eastwood said, “I didn’t want to do a western – westerns were dead.” He said of Rawhide, “But then I recognized Yojimbo in it, and you could feel a lot of the black humor. And I thought, nobody’d ever have the nerve to do this in America.”
But while Eastwood doesn’t seem to agree with violence to extreme measures, he now understands the appeal of a good old-fashioned revenge plotline in a Western. He said, “Everybody has a dream about how they’d like to handle certain situations, every boy from nine to one hundred would like to take vengeance into his own hands…’The vengeance is mine.’ People need to see that.”

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