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Gran Torino is 100-Proof Clint
©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection
In his powerful new film, Eastwood says goodbye with a final blast of gunfire and a wry, knowing smile. Michael Korda on Gran Torino, Clint Eastwood’s powerful new film, and what may be the actor’s last.
I have an admiration for Mr. Eastwood that borders on the kind that I have for the Grand Canyon. Like it, he is craggy, worn, awesomely impressive and unique, a living four-star tourist attraction that, in the formulaic words of the Guide Michelin, “vaut le voyage.”
Mr. Eastwood is worth the journey (translation of the above French) to your nearest movie theater, but you should first be warned that his latest, Gran Torino, is minimalist moviemaking, in which Eastwood himself is the entire movie. There is no clever dialog, the story is barebones simple, there is no love interest, and there are no other stars to get in his way.
It was as if Clint Eastwood were saying goodbye to all that, and to us, in final a blast of gunfire.
In fact, after seeing Gran Torino, I had the disturbing impression that it might have been intended as Clint Eastwood’s farewell to acting (I understand he is going to keep on directing). In it he continues his basic movie persona, that of Dirty Harry, the snarling, grumpy, monosyllabic killer who is basically a decent and moral man protecting the innocent and enforcing the law—a persona which he has transferred to many other characters over the years—and brings him to a startling and disturbing surprise ending.
In Gran Torino, Eastwood moves towards the climax of the movie not by staging a shoot-out, but by putting his weapons to one side and confronting the bad guys armed only with a cigarette lighter, guessing that as he reaches for it they will think he’s drawing a pistol. In short, rather than shooting the bad guys, he tricks them, and, just to drive the point home, there’s a quick impression of the crucifixion—a moment which passes very rapidly, but which imprints itself on the viewer indelibly. Eastwood has resolved his moral dilemma—how to protect his newfound Asian friends and neighbors from the predators of the local street gang, with a surprise twist that nothing short of amazing, but completely in character. The symbolism is strong, immediate, and I felt—perhaps wrongly, after all who knows what goes on in his mind?—that it was as if Clint Eastwood were saying goodbye to all that, and to us, in final a blast of gunfire, with a wry, knowing smile on his face, as if to say: I know what’s coming, and it ain’t what you think it is.
Moviegoers who are looking for another Million Dollar Baby or Unforgiven are going to be disappointed, frankly. There is no slapstick humor (the shooting in the outhouse), no woman star (i.e., no equivalent of Hilary Swank), no complicated subplots (as in Mystic River, which Eastwood directed, but didn’t play in), just pure, unadulterated, 100-proof Eastwood, snarling and grimacing and popping open beer cans on his front porch.
He plays a retired, widowed Detroit autoworker, a Korean War veteran whose life has been shaped by duty, honor, sacrifice and a complete refusal to compromise with what seems to him wrong or un-American. We are allowed to imagine that his late wife may have had some softening impulse on him, while she was alive, but he appears to have little or no interest in his two sons, who don’t measure up to his standards, and his only warm feelings seems to be directed toward his dog.
He lives in a modest house, meticulously maintained, in a neighborhood which has run down terminally and is now inhabited by Asians—mostly Hmong from Vietnam, a family of which now lives next door to him, to his unconcealed disgust. The only possessions that interest him are the Garand rifle and Colt .45 automatic he brought home from Korea, along with his Silver Star, his collection of tools, and the Ford Gran Torino he helped to build, which he keeps immaculately polished in his garage. Note, please, that the Ford Gran Torino was a crap car when it was made, and that’s the whole point. It’s not the car he admires, it’s that it represents a different America, when Americans built things and were proud of it, and kept things up, and were proud of that too. The Gran Torino is a dinosaur, and so is Walt Koslowski (Eastwood).
Koslowski is unapologetically racist, but as he gets drawn, against all his instincts, into the life of the family next door, he gradually, bit by bit, humanizes himself, without ever quite losing his surface snarl—it’s a marvelously contrived and directed (by Eastwood) performance, and never descends into sentimentality. Even as he helps turn the boy next door into a man, and digs out his rifle and his pistol to protect his neighbors from the thuggish local Asian street gang who have assaulted the daughter of the house, Walt never asks for our approval or sympathy. He is what he is, Dirty Harry without the badge and the cheap sports jacket, a hero without the chaps and spurs, a man who sees things through to the end whatever the odds against him.
His apotheosis at the end of the movie is gently signaled by the fact that he coughs up blood every once in a while, and sees a doctor—we are given to understand that he is dying—but it would be possible to dismiss these signs, the equivalent of the pistol in the first act that Chekhov uses to predict a death at the end of act three, and be surprised, indeed amazed, by the end of the movie. Or you may get it before I did—all I can say is that it knocked my socks off.
This is vintage Eastwood, the character he has always played best, taking a surprising turn in his scrappy, sharp-tempered old age. He’s a wonderful actor, and a great director—I just hope this isn’t his way of saying good-bye. I also hope he gets an Academy Award, for best actor or best director, or both—he has earned it.
In any case, he is genuinely a national monument, and should be listed such, or perhaps as a protected species, something with a hard shell, sharp teeth and a heart of gold.
New York Times bestselling author Michael Korda's books include Ike, Horse People, Country Matters, Ulysses S. Grant, and Charmed Lives. He lives with his wife, Margaret, in Dutchess County, New York.









I am disappointed that, of all people, Michael Korda seems unaware that pure alcohol is 200-proof....
Nice review, but...............
Unforgiven's "shooting in the outhouse" was slapstick humor? Wow....get some help.
I'm happy that Mr. Eastwood, who made his fortune and fame in lame "White Man has big penis" movies--movies where heroes (always photogenic white guys) kill all evildoers, overcome odds, and re-prove that every problem can be solved by a good punch in the nose, has found a way to hook the unchanging movie audience into something more.
Eastwood has indeed grown into something worth valuing in our culture. Thank you Clint and time.
Yeah, I'd agree that it's more like, well, at least 190 proof Clint. I enjoyed the film. It ended the only way it it could.
I was thrilled to see "Dirty Harry", a man's man, make this movie. Part of me was also wondering if Clint held this back for fear of it somehow helping McCain seem "cool." Hehe. Anyway, this movie had me thinking about what America really means today, and what exactly is the definition of an American. I mean, the Mexican gang arguing with the Hmong gang and someone shouting something about going back to their own country was brilliant! And the whole story line about how to be a man...some great, funny scenes about a serious topic. But, I couldn't help but think about what some of the "messages" might be, especially in light of the end of our ultra-masculine, cowboy presidency. Hmm...would a real man say something sissy like "We've got to think this through?" Hell no, you go in blazing and hell-raising and leave the elite thinkers to sit at home and "plan." Yeah, that crap still works, especially on people who think Barack Obama is a Muslim. My favorite scene, the one that made me feel proud, simply showed an American muscle car being driven by a young American man. Those who are shocked or disgusted at all the immigrants in "their" country don't truly understand what America stands for.
Woah! Spoiler alert! But a really great article. I truly think Gran Torino is going to rock the oscars in multiple catagories. Loved it, loved it, loved it. And the cherry? Clint sings a bittersweet song at the end of the movie. Aaaw.
No kidding on the spoiler... how about a big warning at the beginning of the article, Mr Korda?
He was born Rowdy Yates and he'll die Rowdy Yates. I was hoping he would mature beyond adolescent fascination with violence and guns. Any jackass can shoot someone. I'd like to see the old outlaw Josie Wales hang up his guns for good and ripen into a wise old man.
Say, I missed it first time around. Mr. Korda, I thoroughly enjoyed your book Ike: An American Hero. It deserved better editing though, as it has glaring errors. I'm a history buff but I learned a great deal about Ike, WWII, allied rivalries, etc. Very fine literature.
WTF. Just ruin the whole fing movie!!! Have you ever written a movie review before? Thanks for telling me how it ended in the first graph.
It has been nice to see him grow up though. And Issywise there are plenty of Black man or mexican man has big penis movies as well. I know that on this site white men are one step below Satin and just barely better than genital warts but give me a break. Now we have to apologize for the pale rider!!!
WTF! I still can't believe you did that without even throwing up a disclaimer or something!!!
Please write more reviews and tell the ending right off the bat without warning. I am sick of wasting all my time enjoying the movies while I am watching them. Instead I can just read your interpretation of them instead.
Wow it is like a half hour later and I still can't believe you did that.
Just plain lazy. Couldn't tell his story without giving away the end. LAZY
some of us are.. maybe more of us should be.. i want movie reviews to function as cliff notes.. i can do without suspense.. i need to know essential plot elements like if they kill a puppy for pathos.. you can kill a thousand guys with a chainsaw and my baby won't blink but one single cinematic puppy for pathos slaying's gonnna ruin the night and maybe the next day..
you don't stop going to opera or shakespeare cos you know what's gonna happen do you?
when i wander into this eastwood opus on some sunday afternoooon in the future i shall go:
'o yeah, i remember this..'
if it turns out i like it i'll say
'this is better than i thought was, how it do?'
baby; 'i think maybe it got nominated..'
me: 'yeah? it win?'
baby: 'can't remember'
Just like his books. Couldn't even give them a proof read before they were out the publishers door.
Just look at his picture. Anyone who would allow such a picture of themselves like that to appear in public is bound to spoil a movie.
I'm a big Eastwood fan and thought at this stage of his career he could do no wrong, well, turns out I was wrong. While his acting was fine, the work of those around him, save for the grandma that lived next door was really pathetic. I was uncomfortable the whole time. Even more mind boggling is the lack of criticism of this fact. Unbelievable.
Glad to see that the first comment was a correction of the "100 proof" thing. I read the article mostly to see if the writer really meant that Gran Torino was 50% Clint. I don't understand how so many people make this error, especially when they think they are being clever. Have they NEVER looked a booze bottle label?
Thank you.
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