“Clint Eastwood: 35 Films 35 Years At Warner Bros.” To Be Released February 16, 2010 From Warner Home Video
(November 30, 2009 – Burbank, CA) - Clint Eastwood’s illustrious motion picture career has spanned more than a half century and has touched generations of filmgoers. The filmmaker/actor has won five Academy Awards®, and his films have grossed nearly $2 billion at the domestic box office. Warner Home Video (WHV) will celebrate Eastwood and his 35-year association with the studio through Malpaso Productions with a comprehensive, elegant giftset, “Clint Eastwood: 35 Films 35 Years at Warner Bros.,” to be released February 16, 2010.
The collection, considered the largest feature film box set ever released for a single artist, contains 34 classic Eastwood films from the Warner library and highlights the breadth and depth of his work -- from “Where Eagles Dare” through “Gran Torino.” Included are his “Dirty Harry” movies, his Best Picture Oscar® dramas and nominees, his Westerns, his war movies, his comedies, and more. (A complete list is available at the end of this release.)
The 35th film is “The Eastwood Factor,” an intimate short film from Time magazine critic and film historian Richard Schickel. “The Eastwood Factor” presents Eastwood in a way he’s rarely seen -- visiting film locations or sites where his movies were created, and on the Warner lot visiting the costume department and Eastwood Scoring Stage, as well as at his home. Eastwood’s candid, intelligent and often humorous interviews about his body of work and the choices he made, along with Schickel’s selection of scenes from his movies (including his upcoming “Invictus”), results in an up-close and personal portrait of one of the great icons of our era. The end result is a clear reminder of why Eastwood’s career as both a great filmmaker and actor has been so enduring and his work so respected.
“I’ve known Clint for most of the time he’s been at Warner Bros.,” said Schickel. “I was fortunate to be able to wander around the Warner lot with him and hear his reminiscences. To be able to show him in the places where he works and lives and feels most comfortable is, I think, a unique opportunity.”
A sampling of the documentary is scheduled to run on a minimum of 10,000 screens nationwide in the first quarter of 2010. Additional moments from this remarkable retrospective of Eastwood’s career will be glimpsed over the course of the media campaign in support of the release.
The box set will also include a 24-page booklet extracted from Richard Schickel’s new monograph “Clint: A Retrospective,” as well as Studio letters and photos. Packaged in a
20-page double-wide album, “Clint Eastwood: 35 Films 35 Years at Warner Bros.” will contain 19 discs and will sell for $179.98 SRP. Orders are due January 12.
Select titles from “Clint Eastwood: 35 Films 35 Years at Warner Bros.” will also be available for download via iTunes, Xbox Live, Zune Marketplace, Amazon Video on Demand and other digital retailers.
The full 288-page book from Richard Schickel, entitled “Clint: A Retrospective,” will be published at the end of February/early March by Sterling Publishing Inc. This definitive appraisal contains 325 photographs, meticulously researched from Warner Bros.’ files and other key image archives. It is Schickel’s homage to the actor who, Schickel says, has most inspired him as a critic over the years. Eastwood himself provides an introduction. A 20-minute version of the full-length documentary will accompany the book, which will also be released in all English-speaking territories overseas. Translations by major publishers will follow in France, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Spain and Japan.
In making the announcement, Jeff Baker, WHV’s Executive VP and General Manager, Theatrical Catalog said, “There is not much you can say that hasn’t already been said about this amazingly talented man. We are so proud to have had such a longstanding association with Clint, and we’re delighted to be releasing this major collection so both loyal fans and those newly discovering Clint can enjoy his wonderful body of work.”
Eastwood’s relationship with Warner Bros. began in 1975 with the signing of a long-term pact, and Eastwood’s Malpaso Productions moved onto the studio’s storied lot. Among the many awards the actor/filmmaker has received for his work are four Oscars® and 11 nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director Academy Award® wins for “Unforgiven” and “Million Dollar Baby,” both of which were made at Warner Bros. Eastwood has also received five Golden Globes®, countless critics association accolades and Lifetime Achievement awards from, among others, the Directors Guild of America, Screen Actors Guild, the American Film Institute and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (Cecil B. DeMille Award). In addition, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented him with the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award. Recently, Eastwood was made a commander in the prestigious French Legion of Honor (Légion d’honneur), cited for his “body of work, his longevity and his ability to delight audiences around the globe.”
Early in his career, Eastwood starred as the “Man with No Name” in “A Fistful of Dollars,” his first “spaghetti western,” which was a box office success and drew attention to the young actor. Additional roles followed, including the role of Harry Callahan in five “Dirty Harry” films, beginning in 1971. That same year, he made his directorial debut with “Play Misty for Me.” Other noted Eastwood films include the Charlie Parker biography “Bird”; “The Bridges of Madison County”; “In the Line of Fire”; “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil”; “White Hunter, Black Heart”; “Absolute Power”; “Space Cowboys”; “Mystic River”; “Flags of Our Fathers”; “Letters from Iwo Jima”; and, most recently, “Gran Torino.” His newest film, “Invictus,” stars Oscar® winners Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon in the inspiring true story of how Nelson Mandela joined forces with Francois Pienaar, captain of South Africa's rugby team, to help unite their country.
Film Titles in the 35 Films 35 Years at Warner Bros. Collection
“Where Eagles Dare,” 1968
“Kelly's Heroes,” 1970
“Dirty Harry,” 1971
“Magnum Force,” 1973
“The Enforcer,” 1975
“The Outlaw Josey Wales,” 1976
“The Gauntlet,” 1977
“Every Which Way but Loose,” 1978
“Bronco Billy,” 1980
“Any Which Way You Can,” 1980
“Honkytonk Man,” 1982
“Firefox,” 1982
“Sudden Impact,” 1983
“City Heat,” 1984
“Tightrope,” 1984
“Pale Rider,” 1985
“Heartbreak Ridge,” 1986
“Bird,” 1988
“The Dead Pool,” 1988
“Pink Cadillac,” 1989
“White Hunter, Black Heart,” 1990
“The Rookie,” 1990
“Unforgiven,” 1992
“A Perfect World,” 1993
“The Bridges of Madison County,” 1995
“Absolute Power,” 1997
“Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil,” 1997
“True Crime,” 1999
“Space Cowboys,” 2000
“Blood Work,” 2002
“Mystic River,” 2003
“Million Dollar Baby,” 2004
“Letters from Iwo Jima,” 2006
“Gran Torino,” 2008
“The Eastwood Factor, Short Film,” 2009 About Warner Home Video With operations in 90 international territories, Warner Home Video, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, a division of the Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, commands the largest distribution infrastructure in the global video marketplace. Warner Home Video's film library is the largest of any studio, offering top quality new and vintage titles from the repertoires of Warner Bros. Pictures, Turner Entertainment, Castle Rock Entertainment, HBO Home Video and New Line Home Entertainment. About Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group brings together Warner Bros. Entertainment's home video, digital distribution, interactive entertainment/videogames, direct-to-DVD production, technical operations and anti-piracy businesses in order to maximize current and next-generation distribution scenarios. WBHEG is responsible for the global distribution of content through DVD, electronic sell-through and VOD, and delivery of theatrical content to wireless and online channels, and is also a significant worldwide publisher for both internal and third party videogame titles.# # #
“Kelly's Heroes,” 1970
“Dirty Harry,” 1971
“Magnum Force,” 1973
“The Enforcer,” 1975
“The Outlaw Josey Wales,” 1976
“The Gauntlet,” 1977
“Every Which Way but Loose,” 1978
“Bronco Billy,” 1980
“Any Which Way You Can,” 1980
“Honkytonk Man,” 1982
“Firefox,” 1982
“Sudden Impact,” 1983
“City Heat,” 1984
“Tightrope,” 1984
“Pale Rider,” 1985
“Heartbreak Ridge,” 1986
“Bird,” 1988
“The Dead Pool,” 1988
“Pink Cadillac,” 1989
“White Hunter, Black Heart,” 1990
“The Rookie,” 1990
“Unforgiven,” 1992
“A Perfect World,” 1993
“The Bridges of Madison County,” 1995
“Absolute Power,” 1997
“Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil,” 1997
“True Crime,” 1999
“Space Cowboys,” 2000
“Blood Work,” 2002
“Mystic River,” 2003
“Million Dollar Baby,” 2004
“Letters from Iwo Jima,” 2006
“Gran Torino,” 2008
“The Eastwood Factor, Short Film,” 2009 About Warner Home Video With operations in 90 international territories, Warner Home Video, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, a division of the Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, commands the largest distribution infrastructure in the global video marketplace. Warner Home Video's film library is the largest of any studio, offering top quality new and vintage titles from the repertoires of Warner Bros. Pictures, Turner Entertainment, Castle Rock Entertainment, HBO Home Video and New Line Home Entertainment. About Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group brings together Warner Bros. Entertainment's home video, digital distribution, interactive entertainment/videogames, direct-to-DVD production, technical operations and anti-piracy businesses in order to maximize current and next-generation distribution scenarios. WBHEG is responsible for the global distribution of content through DVD, electronic sell-through and VOD, and delivery of theatrical content to wireless and online channels, and is also a significant worldwide publisher for both internal and third party videogame titles.