Who wants Clint Eastwood dead? The story of 40 years of often unfair criticism

It took Clint Eastwood forty years to disarm critics, who considered him an apologist for brutality and machismo. Film historian Noël Simsolo retraces the stages of a trial he witnessed first-hand.

This article is taken from Figaro Hors-Série “Clint Eastwood, the last of the giants”.


Figaro Hors-Série Clint Eastwood, the last of the giantsts
Le Figaro

For me, it all started with the credits of For a Fistful of Dollars which obviously featured only Anglo-Saxon pseudonyms. The year was 1966. I was a twenty-one-year-old film nut at the time, and I wondered who the participants in this fake American western filmed in Spain and France might be. Cinecittà. Then public success lifted the secrecy of Italian identities: the director Sergio Leone, the actor Gian Maria Volonté, the composer Ennio Morricone… The only American to appear under his real name was a thirty-four year old actor who shared the starring role of Rawhide, a TV series not yet broadcast in France. His name was Clint Eastwood. He’d been working in Hollywood for ten years without landing a major role, which was surprising given his impressive composition as an unshaven cowboy…

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