Clint Eastwood speaks in a gentle, soothing voice but you cannot miss his convictions. When a journalist recently asked him if his latest film, Mystic River, is an atonement for acting in Dirty Harry, he resolutely said, "No." A huge hit directed by Don Siegel, Dirty Harry starred Eastwood as a vigilante cop determined to nab a serial killer. The film was denounced by some critics for being a fascistic.
"Then is then, now is now. Times change, people change," Eastwood added. Mystic River, which opened the New York Film Festival, released in NY and Los Angeles a week ago to extraordinary reviews. The Warner Bros film is now playing nationwide.
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In Mystic River, which Eastwood directed from a novel of the same name by Dennis Lehane, two powerful men in Boston are shown robbing the innocence of a child. The men drive into a working class neighborhood and scare some boys, taking one of them in their car. If Dirty Harry saw him as a vengeance-prone cop, Mystic River hails him as the victim's rights advocate.
There is a cop character (Kevin Bacon) in Mystic River but unlike Dirty Harry, he is not a seemingly all-knowing, trigger happy officer. He is a very troubled man, gnawed by self-doubt. But there seems to be some hope for him at the film's end.
Eastwood explained his change of view, saying "it is all about aging."
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Referring to the kidnapping and sexual assault of an 11-year-old boy in the story, Eastwood said: "There's something about child molestation that deeply bothers me. There's just something about stealing innocence, stealing somebody's life away, that is such a capital offence."
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