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Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood and Spike Lee’s feud was settled at a basketball game

When you’ve been around in Hollywood for as long as Clint Eastwood has, you’re bound to make your fair share of enemies in the industry. Spike Lee is not one to mince his words either, so it makes sense that the two legendary filmmakers would have become embroiled in a bitter feud at some point in their illustrious careers. What’s special about this disagreement, though, is that Lee randomly decided to declare the feud was over during a basketball game — and Clint Eastwood wasn’t even there.

Apparently, the feud began when Lee took offence to two of Eastwood’s war movies – Letters From Iwo Jima and Flags of Our Fathers – for their lack of representation for Black soldiers. At a press conference at the Cannes Film Festival in 2008, Lee publicly condemned Eastwood for not including a single Black actor in either movie.

Eastwood had a simple explanation though, explaining that factually speaking, no Black soldiers actually raised the flag (despite hundreds being involved in the events upon which the movies are based) and he wanted to avoid historical inaccuracies.

According to reports, Eastwood proceeded to suggest that Lee should “shut his face,” to which Lee’s response was to call Eastwood “an angry old man,” and reminded the actor-turned-director that he is “not my father and we’re not on a plantation either.”

The feud simmered for a while, before Lee ended it all in true soap opera fashion. While in attendance of an LA Lakers basketball game, Lee spotted Jeffrey Katzenberg, Steven Spielberg, and Eddie Murphy sitting together. He approached Spielberg and declared the animosity between himself and Eastwood was done.

“I said ‘Steven, it’s over with Clint Eastwood.’ Steven laughed and said, ‘I’ll call Clint and tell him in the morning.’ I said, ‘It’s over.’ He said, ‘Good,’” Lee recounted to The New Yorker. We can only assume that Spielberg did indeed pass on the message to Clint, and that the rest, is history, it seems.

Despite their disagreements, one thing is for certain; Spike Lee movies and Clint Eastwood movies are generally very, very good, and we are glad their feuding doesn’t get in the way of their filmmaking.

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Clint Eastwood

The Dollars Trilogy Hides the Most Disgusting Clint Eastwood Secret in Plain Sight

Clint Eastwood has been known around the world as a veteran director beyond all means. Eastwood, however, started his journey as an actor portraying several iconic and notable roles over the years.
Starring in Sergio Leone’s The Dollars Trilogy, Clint Eastwood starred in a genre of movies called Western spaghetti. Portraying the role of The Man with No Name, Eastwood’s dedication to the role is both commendable and a bit disgusting as he reportedly never washed his character’s cape over the course of three years!
Clint Eastwood in a still from The Mule

Clint Eastwood in a still from The Mule
Clint Eastwood Wore An Unwashed Serape For Three Years!
Back in 1964, Italian director Sergio Leone released the iconic film A Fistful of Dollars. Portraying the story of an unknown riding into town with two opposing factions, the movie was essentially a cowboy movie with plenty of action scenes for people to enjoy.
In the movie, Clint Eastwood portrayed the role of The Man with No Name. Wearing a serape around his neck and carrying pistols in his holster, Eastwood’s character became notoriously famous from the movie. A year later, Leone released For a Few Dollars More, a sequel to the 1964 film, and Clint Eastwood reprised his role of The Man with No Name.
Finally, in 1966, Sergio Leone released The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, thus completing The Dollars Trilogy. As per a report by Outsider.com, Eastwood never washed his iconic cape throughout the shooting of The Dollars Trilogy. Alleging that the cape was a memorabilia of how far the character had come throughout these movies, Eastwood wore the same cape for three years without washing it once!
Sergio Leone Talked About Working With Clint Eastwood
Although it was Leone’s movies that made Eastwood famous in Hollywood, the director has had some complaints with the veteran actor. Comparing him to Robert de Niro, Sergio Leone revealed in an interview with American Film that Eastwood was like a block of marble!
“Robert De Niro throws him­self into this or that role, putting on a personality the way someone else might put on his coat, naturally and with ele­gance, while Clint Eastwood throws himself into a suit of armor and lowers the visor with a rusty clang.”
He further continued,
“[Clint] East­wood moves like a sleepwalker between explosions and hails of bullets, and he is always the same — a block of marble. Bobby [Robert De Niro], first of all, is an actor. Clint, first of all, is a star. Bobby suffers, Clint yawns.”
Despite whatever the director and Clint Eastwood had between them, the two went their separate ways at the end of The Dollars Trilogy. Eastwood went on to become an iconic actor with his portrayal of action characters and then later became a veteran director with a unique take on movies.

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Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood once explained why we are living in a “pussy generation”

Some stars of Hollywood cinema are indelibly linked to American culture, with the likes of John Wayne, James Stewart, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks having made some of the medium’s most patriotic flicks. The actor and director Clint Eastwood is very similar, taking the reins of the western genre from Wayne in the late 20th century, thanks to such hits as The Good, The Bad and the Ugly and The Outlaw Josey Wales.
Rising to popularity in the early 1960s, largely thanks to his role in the TV series Rawhide, where he starred with Eric Fleming, Eastwood later found success on the silver screen, taking the lead role in Sergio Leone’s ‘Dollars’ spaghetti western trilogy, where he played the iconic and mysterious ‘Man With No Name’. By the end of the decade, he was well and truly an established star of contemporary Hollywood.
In the 21st century, with four Academy Awards and 11 nominations under his belt, Eastwood is considered a veteran of the industry who was born in a different time in Hollywood when the studio system era was slowly coming to an end. Much has indeed changed since the time the actor rose to fame, with the movie industry now far more complex due to the rise of streaming, whilst social values have also changed, thankfully becoming far more tactful and accepting of other races and sexual identities.
Yet, speaking in an interview with Esquire back in 2016, it doesn’t appear that Eastwood considers these changes particularly positive.
“Everybody’s getting tired of political correctness, kissing up,” the actor stated in response to how his hardy characters remain relevant in society.
Continuing, he added: “That’s the kiss-ass generation we’re in right now. We’re really in a pussy generation. Everybody’s walking on eggshells. We see people accusing people of being racist and all kinds of stuff. When I grew up, those things weren’t called racist”.
Clearly, a little upset that ‘things aren’t like they used to’, despite the clear social progress of contemporary life, Eastwood goes on to further define his thoughts on the “pussy generation”, exclaiming: “All these people that say, ‘Oh, you can’t do that, and you can’t do this, and you can’t say that.’ I guess it’s just the times”.
Naturally, this conversation led to the subject of Donald Trump, who was, at the time, about to win the 2016 Presidential Election. “What Trump is onto is he’s just saying what’s on his mind. And sometimes it’s not so good. And sometimes it’s…I mean, I can understand where he’s coming from, but I don’t always agree with it,” the actor says of the former President before adding that he doesn’t endorse him.
Take a look at the trailer for Gran Torino, starring Eastwood, a film that deals with political correctness, generational changes and modern-day racism, below.

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Clint Eastwood

Juror No. 2: J.K. Simmons Joins the Cast of Clint Eastwood’s Courtroom Thriller Movie

Per Deadline, Simmons has been tapped to play a juror in Clint Eastwood’s upcoming courtroom thriller. He’s joining an ensemble cast that includes Nicholas Hoult, Toni Collette, Gabriel Basso, Zoey Deutch, Kiefer Sutherland, Leslie Bibb, and Chris Messina.

Simmons has been professionally acting since the 1990s. In the world of comic book movies, Simmons played J. Jonah Jameson in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man movies and James Gordon in the DCEU. He won an Oscar in 2015 for playing Fletcher in Damien Chazelle’s Whiplash, while he was also nominated for another in 2022 for Aaron Sorkin’s Being the Ricardos.
He’s additionally starred in 2007’s Juno, 2008’s Burn After Reading, 2009’s Jennifer’s Body, 2016’s The Accountant, 2019’s Klaus, and more, along with a number of television roles in shows such as Law & Order, Oz, The Closer, The Legend of Kora, and Ultimate Spider-Man.
What is Juror No. 2 about?
“Family man Justin Kemp who, while serving as a juror in a high profile murder trial, finds himself struggling with a serious moral dilemma…one he could use to sway the jury verdict and potentially convict or free the wrong killer,” the synopsis reads.”

With a script written by Jonathan Abrams, Juror No. 2 was officially announced in April 2023 from Warner Bros. Production on the movie began in June 2023; however, it was delayed one month later because of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) strike. Filming has since resumed in Atlanta, Georgia.
In addition to directing, Eastwood is also producing the movie with Tim Moore, Jessica Meier, Adam Goodman, and Matt Skiena. Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Jeremy Bell, and David M. Bernstein serve as executive producers.
Juror No. 2 does not yet have an official release date from Warner Bros.

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