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Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood Vs Quentin Tarantino: Who Has A Higher Net Worth?

A paparazzi once cornered Quentin Tarantino as he was coming out of an airport and asked him which Clint Eastwood film was his favorite. The Hateful Eight director said The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, unsurprisingly.
Clint Eastwood has also praised Tarantino’s work and said that Pulp Fiction was one of the best films he saw at the Cannes Film Festival the year it premiered.
It’s really no surprise that both iconic directors love each other’s work. Tarantino has, of course, drawn from his influences, including Eastwood, for virtually every one of his projects. His love for spaghetti Westerns, the genre Eastwood made famous, shines on in his films The Hateful Eight, Django Unchained, and you can argue, all of his other eight films.
But if Eastwood and Tarantino were both starring in a Western and it came time for the famous showdown, who would win? Eastwood’s got a couple of decades on Tarantino.

Eastwood’s 91 Years Old And Not Stopping
This year Eastwood turned 91, and Variety pointed out he’s still outshooting directors half his age. “There’s no putting Clint Eastwood out to pasture,” they wrote.
Eastwood has been acting since 1955 and directing since 1971.
He entered into the Western world with the series Rawhide, in which he starred from 1959 to 1965. Then he starred in Italian filmmaker Sergio Leone’s Dollars Trilogy as the “Man with No Name” throughout the ’60s. Into the ’70s, he took his fame even higher, as the antihero cop Harry Callahan, a.k.a. Dirty Harry, in the five films.
He’s acted in nearly all of the films he’s directed, including Bronco Billy (1980), Firefox (1982), Sudden Impact (1983), Pale Rider (1985), Heartbreak Ridge (1986), Unforgiven (1992), True Crime (1999), Millions Dollar Baby (2004), and Gran Torino (2008).

He started to sit back behind the scenes in the director’s chair for his later films though, including Mystic River (2003), Flags of Our Fathers (2006), Letters from Iwo Jima (2006), Changeling (2008), Invictus (2009), Hereafter (2010), J. Edgar (2011), Jersey Boys (2014), American Sniper (2014), Sully (2016), and The 15:17 to Paris (2018).
For his earliest roles, Eastwood was only taking home a couple of hundred dollars. Still, once he established himself as a cultural icon in the ’70s and ’80s, he was making way more, especially starring and directing. So the four-time Oscar winner’s $375 million net worth isn’t astounding.
There’s no slowing down for him either. Last year, he told the U.K.’s This Morning that he enjoys what he does.
“I like doing it; it’s nice to be able to have a paying job,” he said. “I like being in films, I like making films, and I started directing films because I thought one day I’m going to look up on screen and say, ‘That’s enough, Eastwood – you’d better do something else.’”
He’s also expressed his confusion over fellow directors Billy Wilder and Frank Capra’s decisions to quit the business at a younger age. He wants to keep working as long as he’s able to unearth projects that are “worth studying.”
Does Dirty Harry come out on top, though?
Tarantino Wants To Throw In The Towel
 

Tarantino obviously has a way younger career than Eastwood’s, but no less successful. He started his career in the late ’80s when Eastwood was already internationally famous.
Unlike Eastwood, Tarantino did not start his career acting (although he does have some minor credits, mostly from his own films). He entered the business writing and directing.
His first film was 1992’s Reservoir Dogs, then came Pulp Fiction (1994), Jackie Brown (1997), Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003), Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004), Death Proof (2007), Inglourious Basterds (2009), Django Unchained (2012), The Hateful Eight (2015), and what might be his very last film, Once Upon a Time… In Hollywood (2019).
Tarantino claims he wants to retire after ten successful films because he wants to end his career on a high instead of fading out with unsuccessful follow-up films. “I guess the idea is nothing lasts forever. I’ve been making movies one way for a while. I’ve built my whole life to do that,” Tarantino explained. “I would rather choose my own ending.”
He told Indie Wire, “I guess I do feel that directing is a young man’s game. I do feel that cinema is changing, and I’m a little bit part of the old guard.”
Apparently, he needs to remember that Eastwood is still going strong in the game, too, so he’s not the only one still part of the “old guard.” Regardless, Tarantino’s films have made him a boat-load of money and have contributed to his $120 million net worth.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVYy49s4p-8
So, it turns out that Eastwood is a far richer man than Tarantino. But is that completely surprising? Eastwood has decades on Tarantino, who is very selective about releasing films. Eastwood can’t seem to stop churning them out. We know who’s the richest, but it’s fair to say their success is equal in their respective generations. One thing’s for sure, though, when both Eastwood and Tarantino stop working, it’s going to be a dark day in Hollywood.

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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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