Clint Eastwood [40 Film Collection] [DVD] [2017]

£29.335
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Clint Eastwood [40 Film Collection] [DVD] [2017]

Clint Eastwood [40 Film Collection] [DVD] [2017]

RRP: £58.67
Price: £29.335
£29.335 FREE Shipping

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Description

A pivotal character in Sergio Leone’s renowned Dollars Trilogy (A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly), the enigmatic gunslinger known simply as The Man with No Name is an iconic figure within the Spaghetti Western genre. Together for the first time, own all 61 films Starring or Directed by Clint Eastwood in one beautiful collection. This limited-edition signature collection boxset contains 63 discs; 61 feature-length films and two behind-the-scenes documentaries, as well as a collection of posters, art cards, and stills offering a closer look at some of Clint Eastwood's most iconic roles. Each boxset is individually numbered, with only 2,000 produced, and contains an introductory foreword from Clint Eastwood. The Man with No Name 1:6 scale figure features a stunning likeness of Eastwood as he appeared in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, complete with his steely-eyed squint and determined expression. Sideshow replicated every detail of Eastwood’s costume in meticulous detail. From the weathering on his dusty and battered telescope crowned hat, to the frayed edges of his trademark serape poncho, and even the rust on his spurs. Throughout the nearly 30 years that Sideshow has been in business, it is rare to have a creative partnership like the one we have with Clint Eastwood.

Though Eastwood is probably best known as the Man With No Name – the mysterious loner with the poncho and the cigarillo – he did not make all that many westerns, and none since Unforgiven in 1992. Unlike John Wayne, Randolph Scott and all the other great cowboys of yore, Eastwood has never made a bad western. Indeed, it was Eastwood, bringing to life Leone’s vision, who deposed Wayne and the other just-add-water cowpokes, by introducing an entirely new kind of hero. The Man With No Name materialised out of nowhere, with an uncertain pedigree and undefined motivation. He embodied the ethos of the 1960s: I just want to be left alone to do my own thing, even if it means killing off half the population of Arizona. Sideshow presents The Man with No Name Sixth Scale Figure, the debut figure of the Clint Eastwood Legacy Collection celebrating the actor's extensive career in film.Thanks to a powerhouse performance by the legendary Clint Eastwood, who took an almost silent role and turned it into a masterclass of understated intensity and quiet capability, The Man with No Name has become synonymous with the “outlaw with a strong moral code” archetype, and an indelible part of global pop culture.

Eastwood is one of the few directors who got better as he entered his twilight years (he is now 87). In fact, he got a lot better. Most directors are playing out the string by the time they come to the end of the line, but this is not the case for him. Gran Torino, from 2008, was timely and oddly moving; last year’s Sully was a miracle of economical film-making; 2003’s Mystic River was dark and gripping; American Sniper, from 2015, was harsh and disturbing; and 2009’s Invictus was inspiring. Hereafter – his 2011 film about psychics in love – was a surprise that came out of nowhere. At a very early point in his career, Eastwood decided he was going to make his own films, blasting off with Play Misty for Me. It would introduce several of Eastwood’s trademark themes – men are spectacularly shallow and mostly want women for sex; cops are idiots; when in doubt, take the law into your own hands. From here on, the classic Eastwood action film, whether it was Dirty Harry or Pale Rider or Sudden Impact or Unforgiven would be animated by a simple principle: there are bad people out there and eventually I’m going to kill them. Just don’t rush me. Eastwood has starred in or directed roughly one movie a year for the past 53 years. Most of them have been pretty good; some have been great. (Some of the greats don’t actually make this box set, including A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More or The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, the films that made him famous).

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Selected items are only available for delivery via the Royal Mail 48® service and other items are available for delivery using this service for a charge. Boxing clever: Eastwood starring with Hilary Swank in Million Dollar Baby (2004). Photograph: Sportsphoto Ltd./Allstar Sixth-scale is a unique collectible medium. The ability to recreate detail at that scale is both challenging and incredibly rewarding. An often under-appreciated element to sixth-scale is the costumery. Sideshow has one of the finest cut-and-sew teams in the world, and I say with great pride The Man with No Name boasts the most film-accurate recreation of one of the most iconic outfits ever to grace the silver screen.”

On the subject of the Dirty Harry figure and the Clint Eastwood Legacy Collection as a whole, Sideshow creative director Tom Gilliland talked about the importance of Eastwood's characters and how their close partnership has helped in producing these figures. A newly released box set, Clint Eastwood: 40 Film Collection, provides a perfect opportunity to assess the star’s remarkable career both as an actor and as a director.

Eastwood has made violent films, arty films, heartwarming films and a handful of dimwit comedies. He has made films that are thrilling from the opening credits (Pale Rider, Gran Torino, Mystic River, Unforgiven, The Outlaw Josey Wales) and films that are dead on arrival ( Jersey Boys, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil). He has made films that are weird (The Beguiled, High Plains Drifter, Changeling), films that are creepy (The Gauntlet, Play Misty for Me, J Edgar), films that are politically incorrect (Dirty Harry, Tightrope, Gran Torino) and even a few films that are charming (The Bridges of Madison County, A Perfect Life, Invictus, Hereafter). He has made a couple of movies that are just plain stupid (the bookend movies Every Which Way But Loose and Any Which Way You Can, co-starring an orangutan, and the inane Kelly’s Heroes), but he hasn’t made a stupid movie in a long, long time. He has taken good books (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, Flags of Our Fathers) and turned them into not-so-good movies, and he has taken treacly, idiotic books (The Bridges of Madison County) and turned them into something wonderful. The first reveal of Sideshow’s eagerly anticipated Clint Eastwood Legacy Collection is a deluxe 1:6 scale figure that pays homage to whom many consider to be the ultimate Western anti-hero. In 1964, Clint Eastwood starred in his first feature, A Fistful of Dollars, and by 1971 he had stepped behind the camera to direct his first feature, Play Misty for Me. Over the next five decades Clint Eastwood's work continues to inspire and influence filmmakers and film fans alike resulting in over 150 acting and directing awards and nominations for his work during his magnificent career.



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