The steady rise of Clint Eastwood's career parallels a pressing desire
in American society over the past five decades for a figure and story of
purpose, meaning, and redemption. Eastwood has not only told and filmed
that story, he has come to embody it for many in his public image and
film persona. Eastwood responds to a national yearning for a vision of
individual action and initiative, personal responsibility, and potential
for renewal. An iconic director and star for his westerns, urban
thrillers, and adventure stories, Eastwood has taken film art to new
horizons of meaning in a series of masterpieces that engage the ethical
and moral consciousness of our times, including Unforgiven, Million
Dollar Baby, and Mystic River. He revolutionized the war film with
the unprecedented achievement of filming the opposing sides of the same
historic battle in Flags of Our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima,
using this saga to present a sharply critical representation of the new
America that emerged out of the war, a society of images and
spectacles.
This timely examination of Clint Eastwood's oeuvre against the backdrop
of contemporary America will be fascinating reading for students of film
and popular culture, as well as readers with interests in Eastwood's
work, American film and culture.