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Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood Turned Down This Role That Eventually Went to Elvis Presley

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 Clint Eastwood turned down the lead role in Charro! because it didn’t have the same star power or level of drama as his previous work in the Man With No Name trilogy.
 Despite its success at the box office, Charro! was missing something, and that something was Elvis Presley’s singing. Audiences were disappointed that The King never sang a single note in the film.
 The decision to not have Elvis sing in the movie may have been a good one for Clint Eastwood, but it left Elvis feeling somewhat abandoned and without a song to sing.

Sometimes the careers of iconic legends pass like two ships in the night, unaware that their paths have come so close together. That was the case with the greatest rock and roll icon of all time and arguably the biggest Western movie star ever. The year was 1969 and the film in question was looking for the newest star in Hollywood whose trajectory was pointing due North. It had the established gunslinger star Clint Eastwood written all over it. The movie was called Charro! and Eastwood was approached to play the lead role of an ex-gang leader turned good guy. When he turned it down per author Victor Adam’s Elvis Encyclopedia, it landed in the hands of none other than “The King” himself, Elvis Presley, who snatched up the role of a redeemed, Jess Wade.

With the film taking the King for a spin, especially in being the only movie audiences saw him with a scruffy beard, what was it about Charro! that Eastwood turned down? After all, the film had the charm of Presley and a strong Western theme that was permeating cinema during the late 1960s.
What Is ‘Charro!’ About?

charro elvisImage via National General Pictures

Jess Wade (Presley) is a bad guy who has broken good and wants to defend the people of a small Mexican town from his former dangerous and motley crew of ne’er-do-wells who have bad intentions — some seriously bad men. At the beginning of the film, Jess wastes no time walking into the town saloon and getting into a gunfight with his former crew. The bandits ride Jess out of town thinking that roughing him up and making him the target of a Mexican Federales search party will be the end of him, but he isn’t having any of it. Instead, he makes a move on villain Vince Hackett’s (Victor French, who is probably the best part of the film) sister Tracy (Ina Balin), but Vince doesn’t take lightly to traitors that are moving on his sister.

As a way to keep the peace, he sends Jess walking into the arid and barren desert with only his saddle to his name. After breaking a wild horse, the spurned and pissed-off cowboy rides back into Charro to settle the score and protect both his father and Tracy. Vince returns with a stolen cannon and threatens to fire upon the town. Elvis Presley is good in the role, but once you know that Clint Eastwood passed on it, it suffers by comparison. Plus, the fact that the only time we hear The King’s singing voice is during the opening credits doesn’t help.
Why Did Clint Eastwood Turn Down the Role in ‘Charro!’?

Clint Eastwood smoking a cigarrette and squinting in 'A Fistful of Dollars' (1964)Image Via United Artists

Clint Eastwood was coming off a string of smash hit spaghetti westerns that he collaborated on with Italian filmmaker, Sergio Leone. The Man With No Name trilogy was spectacular. Beginning in 1964 with For a Fistful of Dollars, followed by For a Few Dollars More in 1965, and culminating with the 1966 epic Western The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly, the Dollars Trilogy cemented Eastwood as one of the biggest names in film. When Charro! arrived at the actor’s desk, there was little chance that the burgeoning star, who would also become Dirty Harry Callahan just a few years later in 1971, was going to bite on a part that didn’t have the same star power or the level of drama and suspense as his previous work.

Again, Charro! is not an awful film as far as Westerns from the period go. But compared to the Dollars Trilogy, it’s not on the same level, and it’s debatable whether even a Morricone harmonica soundtrack and cowboy king Eastwood could have lifted a relatively staid script and story. So, Elvis Presley, who was floundering a bit in his acting career in the late ’60s jumped on the part and made a pretty good film even as his Hollywood star was fading. The whole thing has a very Three Amigos kind of vibe to it, and Eastwood would likely have never gone for that.

‘Charro!’ Did Well at the Box Office, But It Was Missing Something

viva-las-vegas-elvis-presleyImage via MGM

While Elvis Presley might have shown his best in films like Love Me Tender, Jailhouse Rock and King Creole, his films after a certain period began to dwindle in character and story. His presence is always felt on the screen, but in some of his later films, there can be an almost robot-like lack of accentuation and emotion — almost as if he was being forced to churn out movies much to the advisement from his manager, Colonel Tom Parker. The feeling of Charro! is brought out by the supporting cast of French, and Vince’s cackling, crazed brother, Billy Roy Hackett (Solomon Sturges), whose energy also makes Presley’s performance feel a bit flat). But the biggest sticking point had nothing to do with the performance of the rock and roll icon. Audiences went to the theater thinking they were going to get to hear Presley’s silky dulcet tones in the film, but he never sings in the film.

Audiences Didn’t Like That Elvis Doesn’t Sing a Single Note

elvis-thats-the-way-it-isImage via Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

In 1969, the American public laid down a load of cash and wanted to hear some more of the legendary singer belting out some Sturgill Simpson-like pop country-western tunes only to find out that the legend only lends his voice to the opening credit sequence. It doesn’t seem fair, does it? You’ve laid down your money for what you’re expecting to be a similar musical style Elvis Presley movie, and he doesn’t sing a word? You can imagine audiences just digging into their bucket full of 1969 popcorn being excited after hearing the opening song, and spending the next hour and a half being forsaken by Charro!‘s music-less delivery. The decision may have been the best one that Eastwood has made in his long career and what was left kind of left Elvis hanging out to dry without a song to sing.

Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood reveals his favorite directors of all time

If we mention Clint Eastwood, dozens of things will come to mind. films in which he has participated as an actor but also others as a director, and nevertheless, he has won some awards throughout his entire career such as Oscars and Golden Globes.
In fact, Clint Eastwood He is currently still active as a film director, although recently he also participated in some as a protagonist such as La Mula released in 2018 or Cry Macho from 2021.
Be that as it may, Clint Eastwood, for various reasons, does not usually grant many interviews, so we must go back to a few years ago when he was asked which film directors he admired the most.
At that time, he named some of the film directors who had made the greatest impact on him both as a director and as an actor, speaking specifically of Akira Kurosawa, John Ford and Federico Fellini, among others.
Specifically, this was his answer to the question: “I liked Italian movies: [Mario] Monicelli, [Vittorio] From Sica, [Federico] Fellini. I always liked it [Akira] Kurosawa. And now that I revisit old movies, there are some directors you appreciate more. You watch a movie like The Grapes of Wrath [de John Ford] and you realize that it’s a small film shot in a relatively short period of time and yet it has a lot of scope. [William Wellman] “The Ox-Bow Incident is also an intimate story.”
As you can see, looking at Eastwood’s career as a director, the fact that he likes those classic directors has been reflected in all of his subsequent films.
In this way, we could say that Clint Eastwood’s favorite directors throughout his life are Vittorio De Sica, Federico Fellini, John Ford, Akira Kurosawa, Mario Monicelli and William Wellman.
We will see what surprises Clint Eastwood has in store for us in his next appearances as a director, because it seems that he is close to announcing what would be his last film.

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Clint Eastwood

Actors strike over, Clint Eastwood’s ‘Juror #2’ is filming again in Savannah. And you could be in it

With the months-long SAG/AFTRA strike over, movie productions are ramping back up in the state of Georgia.
And that includes in Savannah, where Clint Eastwood’s ‘Juror #2’ is set to continue filming this week.
It was announced back in May that Eastwood would film in Savannah, where he famously directed ‘Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil,’ which was released back in 1997.
Filming for ‘Juror #2’ took place during the summer, with Eastwood spotted working downtown and at a local restaurant.
But just as scenes were scheduled to be filmed in Pooler, the strike shut down all production.
According to Bill Marinella Casting, extras are now needed for various roles, with filming slated from November 19 to December 8.

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Clint Eastwood

Dwayne Johnson’s Man Crush Clint Eastwood Was an Unstoppable Force in Politics: Hollywood Legend’s Run as California Mayor Will Surprise You

While Clint Eastwood is known for his unmatched accomplishments in the realm of acting and directing, the Hollywood icon was also a force of nature in the field of politics. Like some other major Hollywood figures, including Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Unforgiven Star took an interest in running for mayor in his hometown Carmel-by-the-Sea in California in 1986.
Unsurprisingly, it wouldn’t take much effort from Eastwood’s side to win the office, but despite enjoying his 2-year long run as the mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, he had no big ambitions in politics.
Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood

Hollywood Icon Clint Eastwood
Clint Eastwood’s Political Campaign Was Fueled by His Conflict With City’s Administration
Following his repugnance for the rules and regulations regarding building permits and zoning laws in his hometown, Clint Eastwood eventually decided to take things into his own hands. The dispute between him and the City’s administration would push Eastwood to consider running for Mayor, and just hours before the deadline, he would file the papers. And despite a pretty basic campaign, he would win the election by a landslide against Townsend, capturing 72.5% of the vote, as Eastwood claimed that he approached policies from a business point of view.
During his two-year reign, the Oscar winner worked closely with his community to strengthen it, making it easier to build or renovate and build property while also preserving The Mission Ranch. The former mayor of Carmel also opened the library annex, dedicated for children’s use, which is said to be his proudest accomplishment. Eastwood was quoted saying, 
“We got rid of quite a lot of punitive attitudes on the council and helped people get things done. We got things built — beach walkways, a library annex which had been waiting 25 years, and so on. I approached it from a business point of view, not a political one.”
Like Eastwood, Dwayne Johnson, who has been pretty vocal about his admiration for the Western icon, also has been headlining in the political landscape for quite a while now.
Dwayne Johnson Seemingly Shutdowns Possibilities of Entering Politics
After making comments about potentially running for president back in 2017, like Eastwood, it was revealed that a major number of Americans would support his political campaign back in 2021 per poll. And recently, Dwayne Johnson revealed that he was approached by a political party to run for the job, however, the Black Adam Star seemingly shut down the possibilities despite being honored by the offer. Speaking on The Joe Rogan Experience, he said,
“I appreciate it and I’m f**king honored but it made me think, this is either an incredible thing and I’ve got some pretty decent leadership skills, or things are so f**ked up.”
Dwayne JohnsonDwayne Johnson | The Joe Rogan Experience
While Dwayne Johnson might not enter the political landscape anytime soon like Clint Eastwood, he did manage to cement himself as one of the biggest names in Hollywood like the Man with No Name.

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