Drama
Synopsis
An unlikely friendship forms between a bigoted war veteran (Clint Eastwood) and an Asian boy (Bee Vang) who tried to steal the man's treasured automobile.
Cast: Clint Eastwood, Christopher Carley, Bee Vang, Ahney Her, Brian Haley, Geraldine Hughes, Dreama Walker, Brian Howe, John Carroll Lynch, William Hill, Brooke Thao, Chee Thao, Choua Kue, Scott Reeves, Xia Chang
Producer(s): Malpaso Company
Crew: Director - Clint Eastwood, Screenwriter - Nick Schenk, Producer - Clint Eastwood, Producer - Robert Lorenz, Producer - Bill Gerber, Cinematographer - Tom Stern, Film Editor - Joel Cox, Film Editor - Gary Roach, Production Design - James Murakami, Executive Producer - Jenette Kahn, Executive Producer - Tim Moore, Executive Producer - Bruce Berman, Executive Producer - Adam Richman, Costume Designer - Deborah Hopper, Casting - Ellen Chenoweth, Original Music - Kyle Eastwood, Original Music - Michael Stevens, Art Director - John Warnke, Set Decoration - Gary Fettis
Distributor: Warner Bros.
Release Date: 01/09/2009
Running Time: 117 minutes
OFFICIAL SITE
Production Notes:
- Notes provided by Warner Bros. -
Clint Eastwood directs and stars in the drama "Gran Torino," marking his first film role since his Oscar®-winning film "Million Dollar Baby." Eastwood portrays Walt Kowalski, an iron-willed and inflexible Korean War veteran living in a changing world, who is forced by his immigrant neighbors to confront his own long-held prejudices.
Retired auto worker Walt Kowalski fills his days with home repair, beer and monthly trips to the barber. Though his late wife's final wish was for him to take confession, for Walt-an embittered veteran of the Korean War who keeps his M-1 rifle cleaned and ready-there's nothing to confess. And no one he trusts enough to confess to other than his dog, Daisy.
The people he once called his neighbors have all moved or passed away, replaced by Hmong immigrants, from Southeast Asia, he despises. Resentful of virtually everything he sees-the drooping eaves, overgrown lawns and the foreign faces surrounding him; the aimless gangs of Hmong, Latino and African American teenagers who all think the neighborhood belongs to them; the callow strangers his children have grown up to be-Walt is just waiting out the rest of his life.
Until the night someone tries to steal his `72 Gran Torino.
Still gleaming as it did the day Walt himself helped roll it off the assembly line decades ago, the Gran Torino brings his shy teenaged neighbor Thao (Bee Vang) into his life when Hmong gangbangers pressure the boy into trying to steal it.
But Walt stands in the way of both the heist and the gang, making him the reluctant hero of the neighborhood-especially to Thao's mother and older sister, Sue (Ahney Her), who insist that Thao work for Walt as a way to make amends. Though he initially wants nothing to do with these people, Walt eventually gives in and puts the boy to work fixing up the neighborhood, setting into motion an unlikely friendship that will change both their lives.
Through Thao and his family's unrelenting kindness, Walt eventually comes to understand certain truths about the people next door. And about himself. These people-provincial refugees from a cruel past-have more in common with Walt than he has with his own family, and reveal to him parts of his soul that have been walled off since the war...like the Gran Torino preserved in the shadows of his garage.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures, a Double Nickel Entertainment, a Malpaso Production, "Gran Torino." The film is directed by Clint Eastwood from a screenplay by Nick Schenk, story by Dave Johannson & Nick Schenk. Eastwood, Robert Lorenz and Bill Gerber are the producers, with Jenette Kahn, Adam Richman, Tim Moore and Bruce Berman serving as executive producers. The film stars Clint Eastwood, Bee Vang, Ahney Her, Christopher Carley, John Carroll Lynch, Brian Haley, Geraldine Hughes, Brian Howe and William Hill.
The creative behind-the-scenes team is led by Eastwood's longtime collaborators: director of photography Tom Stern, production designer James J. Murakami, editors Joel Cox and Gary D. Roach, and costume designer Deborah Hopper. The music is by Kyle Eastwood and Michael Stevens, orchestrated and conducted by Lennie Niehaus.
"Gran Torino" will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, and in select territories by Village Roadshow Pictures.
The film has been rated R by the MPAA for "language throughout and some violence."
www.thegrantorino.com
For downloadable information and photos from "Gran Torino," please visit press.warnerbros.com.
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
THEY DON'T MAKE THEM LIKE THEY USED TO
Clint Eastwood, an actor and director whose body of work encompasses some of the most enduring and iconic films of all time, has not been in front of the camera since his 2004 Oscar®-winning film, "Million Dollar Baby." "I hadn't planned on doing much more acting, really," he says. "But this film had a role that was my age, and the character seemed like it was tailored for me, even though it wasn't. And I liked the script. It has twists and turns, and also some good laughs."
"Gran Torino" came to Eastwood's producing company, Malpaso, from first-time screenwriter Nick Schenk, who wrote the script from a story he conceived with Dave Johannson. "This was based on their experience in Minnesota and people they knew," comments Eastwood's longtime producer and trusted partner, Robert Lorenz. "We got the script from Bill Gerber, who had received it from Jeanette Kahn. I read it fast, not necessarily thinking that it was something for Clint to act in, but about half-way through I slowed down and started to take it in. It was actually very good, so I read it a second time and just really liked it. I've learned never to oversell anything with Clint, so I gave it to him, saying, 'I don't know if you'll want to make this or be in it, but you'll enjoy reading it.' And he called me and said, 'I really liked that script.' And it went from there."
Schenk says the character of Walt Kowalski wasn't written with a specific actor in mind, noting, "Walt's a little bit of everybody's shop teacher, or even your dad when he's watching you reassemble your bike and screwing it all up. I think everybody knows someone like that."
Originally from Minnesota, Schenk drew on his time working at a factory job with a number of Hmong families-the little-known culture from Laos and other parts of Asia that allied with the U.S. during the Vietnam War-that had settled there. "The Hmong culture is somewhat invisible," he attests.
Walt, who slings racial slurs like most people use nouns and verbs, appears to be an unrepentant racist, but as he makes tenuous human connections with the Hmong people that have moved into his neighborhood, the layers of hostility peel away. "Walt did things in Korea that haunt him, and he sees those faces in his neighbors," Schenk remarks. "To Walt, all Asians are the same, all mixed in a blender. And so it just happens that here's another culture that has no face, and as he learns more about them, he begins to reflect on what happened to him in his own experiences in Korea."
Producer Bill Gerber notes that "Gran Torino" bears echoes of the relationships explored throughout Eastwood's body of work. "Clint has always dealt with complex issues of race, religion and prejudice in an honest way, which can sometimes be politically incorrect but is always authentic," he says. "But because of your familiarity with Clint, you understand that there's more to Walt than what's on the surface. You start in a fairly dark place, and then you begin to see who he is underneath because of his relationship with these people."
"In retrospect, I can't imagine anyone besides Clint Eastwood making this movie or playing this character," adds Dave Johannson. "As a filmmaker Clint is very sparing and also doesn't flinch, no matter how uncomfortable the subject matter. As an actor, it took a certain level of fearlessness to play Walt, who, to put it mildly, isn't a very sympathetic character at first. Walt's bigotry is something he has held onto for 60 years, and having the courage to change something about yourself that is so ingrained, particularly later in life, is a rare and difficult thing. Walt is a physically brave man, but the story forces him to show emotional courage."
The story unfolds after the death of Walt's wife, Dorothy, when he has reached the final chapter of a life that has in many ways been defined by haunting experiences in Korea and his 50 years at the local Ford plant. But now the war is long since over, the factory has been shut down, his wife has passed away, and his grown children barely have time for him. "Walt has worked hard and his sons have been reasonably successful," says Eastwood. "He's lost his wife, and he's estranged from his grown children. They've gone off and left him, and he's just kind of in the way. But in their defense, Walt's not an easy case to handle because he's so cantankerous, and, of course, the grandchildren have piercings and things, and he doesn't approve of all that."
"Walt's very tough to have as a dad," says Brian Haley, who plays Mitch Kowalski. "Mitch is the opposite of his dad. Walt is a hardworking blue-collar guy, and his son is a shallow suburban yuppie. They have a complex relationship. Walt doesn't know how to talk to his son, and Mitch doesn't know how to break through to his dad."
Complicating Walt's desire to be left alone is his late wife's priest, Father Janovich, who is persistent in pursuing her final wish to have Walt take confession. "I joke that my part is basically to show up to the door and have Clint Eastwood slam it in my face," says Christopher Carley, who plays the priest. "Father Janovich is trying to break through to Walt without any real knowledge of how to do it, or how to get Walt to even have a conversation with him. Walt is not impressed by the fact that he's a man of the cloth. He just thinks of him as a '27-year-old over-educated virgin.' Walt makes it clear to him that the regular way of dealing with people is not going to fly with him."
"Walt is probably prejudiced against the priest for lots of different reasons, but mostly because he looks like a kid," says Eastwood. "He's trying very hard to get Walt to confession, but Walt just thinks he's a guy right out of seminary school with a book of 'how-tos,' and so it makes for a very one-way relationship. The 'padre,' as he calls him, is a determined young fellow, but in the end, Walt does it his way."
One of Walt's only real pleasures in life is shining up his Ford Gran Torino, built in 1972 and lovingly preserved beneath a silk tarp in his garage all these years. In fact, Walt himself installed its steering column during his time at the Ford plant. "The Gran Torino is his pride and joy," Eastwood attests. "Walt sort of is the Gran Torino. He doesn't do anything with it except let it sit in the garage. But every once in a while he takes it out and shines it up. Walt with a glass of beer, watching his car - that's about as good as it gets for him at this stage in life."
In the midst of a run-down street of modest two-story houses, Walt's home stands out, with its pristine paint job, neatly trimmed bushes and the American flag proudly displayed. He's not happy with the turn the rest of his neighborhood has taken. "Walt's a guy who is very, very disturbed about the way his world has gone," says Eastwood. "He was raised in a neighborhood in Michigan that was populated with automobile people like he was, probably a high percentage of Polish Americans, like he is. So, when he sees his neighborhood changing, it discourages him."
As the neighboring homes have deteriorated, Walt's has been scrupulously maintained by a man used to working with his hands. "He's the holdout in the community," says Lorenz. "He's somewhat stuck in the past in many ways. And emotionally, we learn that he has been stuck on something that hasn't allowed him to progress as a human being. This dilemma is mirrored in every aspect of his life."
Equally isolated is Walt's neighbor, 16-year-old Thao, who is living in a house with his mother, grandmother and older sister. "He's the only male in the household with no male role model to look up to or learn from," describes Bee Vang, a first-time actor who won the role of Thao. "He's awkward and unsure of himself as a guy because he's surrounded by all these females who are domineering. He's in need of a role model and finds this in Walt."
Thao is a shy kid, out of high school but without a job, who finds himself pressured into joining an ad-hoc Hmong gang, led by a teen called Smokie and Thao's cousin, who goes by the name Spider. "Everywhere Thao goes, somebody picks on him," says Sonny Vue, who plays Smokie. "He can't stick up for himself, so the gang would be there to back him up. Becoming a gang was really so they could protect each other from other gangs in the neighborhood. But things get out of hand when they feel threatened by Walt-they think they have to get tougher, that it will make them more manly."
As first-generation Hmong Americans, Smokie and Spider don't have their elders to guide them the way past generations of Hmong have, because their elders are having a harder time assimilating than they are. "You're trying to live in two different cultures," says Doua Moua, who plays Spider. "So there's a lot of rebellion, and that makes a lot of male teens come together and create a group to try to assimilate in the world around them. A lot of the girls are more bonded to home and family, where their mothers can guide them, and they don't have to rebel as much against their culture or their parents."
The gang initiation Smokie and Spider devise for Thao is to steal Walt's prized Gran Torino. "Thao is trying to prove that he can be manly and trying to find where he belongs," says Vang. But the heist is short-lived, as Walt surprises Thao midway through it, scaring the teen off without seeing his face. "He fails pathetically at this attempt," Vang adds, "and ends up being even more scared and humiliated by the time its over."
Not long after, the gang comes back for Thao, resulting in a fight that spills over onto Walt's front lawn. Wielding his M-1 rifle, left over from his combat days in Korea, Walt issues a warning to all involved: "Stay off my lawn." "He goes back into his war mindset," Eastwood offers. "That's when he really starts to see the problems with the Hmong community, mainly the kids who join gangs."
Walt's unwitting bravery makes him the neighborhood hero, and his Hmong neighbors soon shower him with unwelcome gifts of food, flowers and plants. "He doesn't want to have anything to do with these people," Eastwood says. "He changes when he realizes they are intelligent and they're very respectful of others, and I think he admires that. He has one line in the film where he says, 'I have more in common with these people than I do with my own spoiled, rotten children' and that kind of sums it up. It's interesting, and often funny, how he starts out with a lot of prejudice, and then works his way out of it through these relationships."
The only one to break through Walt's prickly exterior is Thao's spirited older sister, Sue, who is more Americanized than the rest of her family. "Walt is the kind of guy who will call you any names that he wants to," says Ahney Her, who plays Sue. "He doesn't care what race you are. He'll say whatever he feels." Her describes Sue as "a really brave character. She always talks nice to him, even though she does tease him with nicknames like 'Wally,' but ultimately she's the person who is able to connect Walt and Thao together. I think Sue wants her little brother to become friends with Walt because if it goes the other way and he gets in with the gang members, he's just going to mess up his life. She sees that Walt can be like a father, and if Thao listens to Walt, he could probably be led to a better life and a better way of growing up."
Walt and Sue form an easy and light rapport. "She seems to genuinely care about him in a real way, not a phony way, like some of his family members who seem to be just going through the motions and doing what they're supposed to do," Lorenz says. "I think her sincerity appeals to him and he allows himself to get to know her a little bit."
Eventually, Sue is able to lure Walt over to her house for a family celebration, where an encounter with a Hmong shaman puts words to the unspoken truths Walt has been living with all these years. "The thing about the Hmong family-which comes completely into focus in that exchange with the shaman-is that they're willing to say what has been unspoken in Walt's own family," Lorenz notes. "They're willing to draw attention to some things and ask him probing questions that make him reflect on himself more than anyone else has challenged him to do before. That's the heart of his racism-a selfish inability to look at himself. Instead, he projects outward at everyone around him, trying to see his problems as things that others have caused, rather than looking inward to see how he can change and adapt, and these folks force him to do that in some way."
To make amends for the near-theft of Walt's car, Thao's mother and sister pressure him into helping out Walt with odd jobs for a couple of weeks. "They want him to make restitution," says Eastwood. "That's part of their family pride."
Walt's initial response is to call the boy a litany of racist names, deliberately misspeaking his name as "Toad." But as the boy earnestly throws himself into Walt's missions to fix up the deteriorating houses peppering the street, Walt begins to glimpse something in the young man worthy of more than his scorn. "You start to see that their relationship is evolving," says Vang. "Walt starts to appreciate him as things begin to develop with Thao, who is obviously growing and changing from the young boy he was when they first met. And now, with Thao having calluses all over his hands, he's proud that he has finally accomplished something useful-that he is useful."
The purpose of Walt's work with Thao, continues Vang, is to "man him up. Walt's not there just to teach him how to work, but also how to stand up for himself so that he doesn't have to join a gang to feel like a man. Walt is the man who is helping Thao develop more of a backbone."
Walt's ultimate goal becomes to empower the aimless kid to get a job and stay out of trouble so he can have a future, but their oddball relationship also ends up changing Walt himself. "Thao doesn't have a father figure to rely on and give him guidance, and Walt never had a real connection with his own sons that might have given him that satisfaction of fatherhood," says Lorenz. "It's sort of a perfect fit for each of them. Walt is also searching. He clearly knows that he's in the last chapter of his life, and he's searching for someone or something to make sense of it all and to calibrate the value of his life."
Through it all, Smokie and the gangbangers continue to harass Thao and his family, ratcheting up the threat of violence, and forcing the old warrior to take on an entirely new and unexpected mission. "If you just do something half-way, then it becomes a Hollywood bailout," says Eastwood. "And if you're gonna play this kind of guy, you can't go soft with it. You gotta go all the way."
THE STRANGERS NEXT DOOR
"Gran Torino" marks the first major motion picture to portray characters from the Hmong community-an ethnic tribe of 18 clans spread among the hills of Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, and other parts of Asia-who made a difficult transition to the United States following their involvement in the Vietnam War. "I didn't know too much about them," admits Eastwood. "Because they had helped the Americans during the conflict, they were brought here as refugees after the end of the Vietnam War."
"Part of the tragedy is that a lot of people don't understand the role the Hmong people played in the Vietnam War," says Paula Yang, a Hmong adviser the filmmakers consulted early on. "How we came to the United States, and how many of our soldiers and civilians were lost during the war, remains a secret. The elders don't talk about it. They're so humble and there are so many sad stories."
Eastwood points out that the Hmong identify themselves as a culture with its own unique heritage, as opposed to a nationality. "They have their own religions, their own language, and they consider themselves their own people," he explains. "A lot of them have been through many hardships following the Vietnam War. Things weren't very pleasant for them over there, and so the Lutheran church and a lot of individual organizations worked hard to get them over here. But they withstood a lot of sadness, so they're tough, very determined people."
Eastwood wanted to portray the Hmong in "Gran Torino" as authentically as possible, starting with casting an exclusively Hmong cast for those roles in the film. But casting director Ellen Chenoweth soon discovered there weren't many professional Hmong actors listed at SAG.
Chenoweth and her casting associates Geoffrey Miclat and Amelia Rasche cast a wide net and researched on the internet to find hubs of the Hmong community. They made contacts and distributed flyers in Fresno, California; St. Paul, Minnesota; Warren, Michigan; and throughout other areas of the U.S. "This involved a lot of digging," notes Chenoweth, "a lot of getting to know the Hmong communities, making inroads, gaining their trust, and finding out who wanted to be in a movie. It wasn't done through the normal channels. This was really going to them and opening ourselves up to them."
Hmong cultural advisor Cedric Lee helped the casting team with outreach throughout the community. "We'd go to places where Hmong people hung out," he remembers. "We went to Father's Day parties. We went to church events. There's a language barrier, especially for the elders, so we would speak Hmong and then translate to the casting directors. With the youth it's a lot easier, because a lot of them are English-speaking."
Chenoweth and her team started with community leaders in St. Paul and Fresno, and then conducted a series of open casting calls everywhere that Hmong had settled, culminating in a huge, day-long open audition in St. Paul.
Word spread of Eastwood's film through Hmong communities online, through newspapers, youth groups and word of mouth. "People were so excited," says Paula Yang. "It was Clint Eastwood, so people were going to do whatever they could. We had old kids, young kids, old grandmas and grandpas. People were excited because Clint was making this opportunity for our Hmong people."
Soon they had hundreds of auditions on tape. "After we visited each city, we would come back to Los Angeles to go over all the tapes with Clint," Chenoweth explains. "We'd put them up on the screen in his editor's room and started narrowing down our choices until we had several candidates for each role, and then he made his decisions."
From hundreds of prospects, Eastwood cast 16-year-old Bee Vang from St. Paul in the central role of Thao. Chenoweth remembers, "Amelia found him through his school, and on his picture I wrote, 'I heart Bee Vang.' I just loved his face. He had very little acting experience, but had this quality that was so open and sweet. You just wanted him to be okay. When I called Bee Vang and told him we wanted him for Thao, he couldn't even talk for a while. I think it was something that he hadn't ever really dreamed of."
At 5'5", Bee Vang's Thao stands in stark contrast to Eastwood's 6'2" Walt. "Thao is literally always looking up to Walt," says Vang. The Fresno-born teen attended a private audition for the film in the Twin Cities. When he found out he'd won the key role of Thao, "I got down on my knees and started crying," he relates. "The whole thing was really life-changing. I couldn't believe this was happening to me."
Though initially intimidated, Vang soon grew comfortable with Eastwood's low-key style. "Growing up, I'd seen him in Westerns and other films, like 'Dirty Harry,' but I never imagined that I'd ever even meet this guy, and then there he was," he says. "Mr. Eastwood likes things to be as natural as they can be. It has to be real. I like that style. He's a really nice guy, too, a really humble guy. I loved every minute working with him and the rest of the crew. I will never forget this."
Sixteen-year-old Ahney Her beat out hundreds who auditioned for the role of Sue. Amelia Rasche had set up a booth at a Hmong fair in the Detroit area, with a big sign on it saying, "Hmong Movie Casting." "Ahney and her family walked by and Amelia literally ran over and grabbed her and said, 'Do you want to try out for a movie?'" Chenoweth recounts.
Her's confidence and humor made her a natural for the role of the Thao's older sister. "We wanted the sister to have a slightly tougher edge. She's protective of Thao, who is more vulnerable," says Chenoweth. "Ahney definitely had that along with a great kind of youthfulness about her that we all loved."
Her's rapport with Eastwood was not much different from Sue's and Walt's, giving the acting novice added confidence in her first big role. "He's very humble and easygoing," she says. "He likes to make you comfortable and is not the type to tell you exactly what to do. He wants you to do whatever you feel is right, and if it's not right in his eyes, then he'll tell you. He's a great man, and it was amazing to work with him."
"Bee and Ahney both seemed to take to acting very naturally because they had great natural qualities anyway," says Eastwood. "I'd like to take a lot of credit for it, but it really wouldn't be justified."
The role of Vu, the single mother of Thao and Sue, is played by Brooke Chia Thao, who was born in Laos and settled in Visalia, California. Chia Thao had no acting training, and was actually bringing her own kids to the audition when she was cast. "She just happened to be there, so we asked her to audition and she landed the role," recalls Cedric Lee. "The funny thing is she's pretty Americanized, but when you see her as the mother, it's like two completely different people."
For Chia Thao, the film represents a chance to shine a light on her people. "The movie doesn't really represent the whole Hmong culture, but it gives a little taste of it," she says. "I hope that people start to see us in a more unique way, who we are and how we helped in the war. My own father was recruited to fight for the U.S. when he was only 14."
Chee Thao, the 61-year-old who plays the family grandmother, was born in Laos and now lives in St. Paul. "Casting the grandmother was an interesting challenge because the character spoke entirely in Hmong," says casting associate Geoffrey Miclat. "A lot of it was just personality. Grandma is a very funny character, and there was this quality about Chee that made her perfect for the role."
Thao felt a special bond with Eastwood, and spent time talking with the actor/director, with her granddaughter serving as translator. Having lived through a tragic past, she poured her heart and soul into her performance. "Chee Thao said that it was no trouble for her to get into this character because it was her," says Lorenz. "She has had all these struggles that are portrayed in the film. So when she was out there, basically ad-libbing her way through a lot of the scenes-because a lot of the Hmong dialogue wasn't spelled out-it was no trouble. She just said all the right things; she brought her own story to it."
Five Hmong actors from several states and different clans of Hmong were cast as the boys who make up the gangbangers that menace Thao and his family in the film. "There was just a realness about these guys and they had such great faces," says Miclat. "Once we saw Doua Moua in New York, and Sonny Vue in St. Paul, we had a pretty good feeling that they would be our Spider and Smokie. And Doua Moua was actually one of our few Hmong cast members with acting training, so we knew he was going to fit somewhere."
Moua, who moved to New York City when he was 18 to pursue an acting career, was cast as Thao and Sue's cousin, Fong, who now calls himself Spider. Born in Thailand, Moua grew up in Minnesota and was one of the only Hmong cast members with acting experience. "'Gran Torino' is a dream come true for me," he says. "I appreciated every moment that I was on set. Clint was amazing to work with, really laid back."
Sonny Vue, born in Fresno and now from St. Paul, plays the leader of their group, Smokie. At 19 years old, Vue had never been in front of a camera before but was such a natural the casting directors grabbed him from the front desk. "I was talking to the lady at the front counter, and Amelia [Rasche] came up out of nowhere," he recalls. "She was like, 'Do you want to audition for the role?' So, I tried, and I got the part."
The other members of the Hmong gang are played by: Lee Mong Vang, from Toledo, Ohio; Jerry Lee, from St. Paul; and Elvis Thao, who lives in Milwaukee and is a member of the hip hop group RARE. Elvis Thao was also thrilled that Eastwood used one of RARE's songs on the "Gran Torino" soundtrack.
Outside of the Hmong cast members, one of the key roles was that of Father Janovich, the earnest Catholic priest who tries to break through to Walt to fulfill Walt's late wife's dying wish.
Cast in the role, Christopher Carley seemed to embody the qualities Eastwood sought for the priest. "When we saw Christopher Carley, he just looked like a priest," Chenoweth explains. "He had this open Irish face, red hair. I thought he was really good, and when I showed his tape to Clint, he said, 'He looks like a young Spencer Tracy.' I knew he was going to cast him at that point. Clint didn't care about having an established star in that role; he's just really open to giving a chance to people who are perhaps less well-known in the industry."
"I do like to give people a break," says Eastwood. "I like to see new people come along, and have opportunities. But, by the same token, it's important to do whatever suits the film. If somebody who's well known fits the role, then I go for it. If I can use somebody lesser-known who happens to suit the role, then that's fine, too. There's no real rule to it. Every picture has its own structure, and its own personality."
Carley's impression of Eastwood's working style mirrors that of his fellow cast members. "He's very calm and focused, and there's a large element of trust on the set between Clint and the acto