A film critic’s biography of a cinema legend.
Fans of Clint Eastwood have long had a surfeit of biographies about him to choose from. Levy, a film critic whose previous books include volumes on Robert De Niro and Paul Newman, adds to this trove with this admiring work. He’s clearly a fan, praising Eastwood for his “dogged work ethic” and for being “an honest-to-Pete American icon,” yet he also notes Eastwood’s “let’s call it complex history of wives, partners, and children” and the wide range in quality of the many films he has acted in and directed. Levy covers Eastwood’s peripatetic upbringing in Northern California, where he was a mediocre student and cared only about “girls, hot rods, and the piano”; his early love of jazz and “meat-and-potatoes Hollywood films”; his acting success, from television’s Rawhide to the spaghetti Westerns of Sergio Leone to his iconic role as detective Dirty Harry; and his maturation as an accomplished director. The book is repetitive, with Levy describing the plot of every Eastwood picture, the critics’ reactions, and his own assessment. Levy tends to gush: He says of the revisionist Western Unforgiven, “If the devil does get the best lines, this is a film filled with devils, made by angels, depicting Hell with heavenly gifts,” noting that the dialogue is “just as fine and bejeweled as you like.” Yet his glasses aren’t so rose colored that he can’t see the clunkers, writing, for example, that the comedy Any Which Way You Can “makes you feel as if you’re stuck with a drunk who insists on telling the same joke over and over and telling it more loudly each time.” And he doesn’t skimp on details from Eastwood’s colorful personal life, including multiple infidelities and “eight children some forty-two years apart by six different women…that he knew of.”
An evenhanded if overly effusive appreciation of Clint Eastwood’s career.