Monday, 14 September 2020

Four more artists discuss John Lennon

 

John Lennon Is Not Dead is an exhibition taking place at The Stash Gallery inside Vout-O-Reenee's. The exhibition features contributions from 80 esteemed artists who have either made a new work or unearthed something special to celebrate the 80th anniversary of John Lennon's birth. Four of the artists said a few words about what they're contributing...

Mikey Georgeson; "Bed Peace, (acrylic on wood panel.) I grew up in a house where John Lennon was revered and woke up on my 13th birthday to hear he had been shot. John & Yoko were an amazing creative couple. Riding the crest of the wave they infused the world with creative acts and sewed seeds of love. Perhaps the radical and dynamic nature of how they put art in life will be realized more fully one day."


 

 Julie Bennett:"The first John Lennon record I owned was 'The Ballad of John and Yoko' which was bought for me by a life-long friend who is a massive fan. As this record was The Beatles' last number one, I wanted to paint Lennon at the other end of his career before he was famous. My practice examines the role of celebrity so, with Lennon I wanted to consider whether the younger man had a sense of destiny about him, was he always going to be famous? I also wanted to think about the sense of artistic freedom he had before he became so iconic and subsequently, every action was scrutinized by the media which as the ballad implies he felt were out to get him." Christ you know it ain’t easy, You know how hard it can be,The way things are going, They’re going to crucify me.

 


Jasper Joffe: "Lenon (sic) is on linen. On one edge, it says give peace a chance. On the other, revolution by any means necessary."

Hugh Mendes: "My work is called, '20 years ago today'. This painting was made during my MA and was the first time I incorporated a newspaper clipping into a still life painting. It was a memorial as well as a Still Life/Vanitas piece. It led directly to my working with Obituaries, which became an ongoing project and one I am still working with 20 years later. This is the first time it has been shown publicly. "


John Lennon’s Not Dead will feature; drawings, paintings, photography, and collage. There will also be some specially made music and animation and some surprise performances. Because of social distancing there will be 4 Fab gatherings (some of which will be filmed and then shared on You Tube) rather than one big opening party. The Stash Gallery is inside Vout-O-Reenee's, The Crypt, 30 Prescot St, E1 8BB. Please note this celebration of John Winston Ono Lennon is unauthorized and 100 % unofficial.  Vout-O-Reenee's is a private members club and pre booking is essential. http://vout-o-reenees.com/events/john-lennon-is-not-dead-hes-80/ Buy your tickets: HERE

The show opens on Friday 2nd Oct and closes on Wednesday 28th Oct. Vout-O-Reene's is open Tues -Sat 5pm till Late.

Thursday, 10 September 2020

Another Fab Four Artists talk about John Lennon

 John Lennon Is Not Dead is an exhibition taking place at The Stash Gallery inside Vout-O-Reenee's. The exhibition features contributions from 80 esteemed artists who have either made a new work or unearthed something special to celebrate the 80th anniversary of John Lennon's birth. Four of the artists said a few words about what they're contributing...

Magda Archer: “The Beatles playing on the roof was one of the coolest things ever.  Other bands have tried to do it since but they don’t come close. I like the fact John Lennon loved cats. And I love the footage of him with a fan who just turns up at his house in Surrey. And my Dad had the book, A Spaniard in the Works. I remember thinking, “Oh, he draws TOO.”

Kevin Eldon:'I've always been fascinated  at how Lennon morphed into different people every couple of years throughout the sixties: slicked back rocker, black clad existentialist, cuddly mop top, bespectacled poet and, as in my scribble, the hairy peace activist artist. All of them had one common element - COOL.'


James Lawson: “My painting is based on the positioning of the 9’s from the New York Times Sudoku from October 9th 2019, John Lennon’s 79th Birthday.” 



Tony Husband: “...stood on the spot in New York where he was shot. You wouldn’t have known. I asked where was John shot? Doorman said, You’re standing on it... felt a chill. RIP John and thank you for so much.”

John Lennon’s Not Dead will feature; drawings, paintings, photography, and collage. There will also be some specially made music and animation and some surprise performances. Because of social distancing there will be 4 Fab gatherings (some of which will be filmed and then shared on You Tube) rather than one big opening party. The Stash Gallery is inside Vout-O-Reenee's, The Crypt, 30 Prescot St, E1 8BB. Please note this celebration of John Winston Ono Lennon is unauthorized and 100 % unofficial.  Vout-O-Reenee's is a private members club and pre booking is essential. http://vout-o-reenees.com/events/john-lennon-is-not-dead-hes-80/ Buy your tickets: HERE

The show opens on Friday 2nd Oct and closes on Wednesday 28th Oct. Vout-O-Reene's is open Tues -Sat 5pm till Late.


Thursday, 3 September 2020

Four More Fab Artists Discuss John Lennon

John Lennon Is Not Dead is an exhibition taking place at The Stash Gallery inside Vout-O-Reenee's. The exhibition features contributions from 80 esteemed artists who have either made a new work or unearthed something special to celebrate the 80th anniversary of John Lennon's birth. Four of the artists said a few words about what they're contributing...

Louise Camrass: “John Lennon expresses what is so difficult. I’m so empty, I’m wracked, all the stuffing has been taken out of me, I’m raw, I feel like a nothing, I’ve blown it, I hate that I need you, I hate that I am jealous, I hate that I hurt. I want to be out of this. ‘I was dreaming of the past and my heart was beating fast – I began to lose control, I began to lose control, I didn’t mean to hurt you, I’m sorry that I made you cry, I didn’t mean to hurt you, I’m just a jealous guy.’ Humanity is all there and I love that.”


Peter Lloyd: “My digital print is titled, The Daily Howl by Not the John’s. After achieving and enjoying super stardom, John grew tired and began to crave anonymity. In a bid to regain some normality he adopted a number of pseudonyms that allowed him to check into hotels, jam and record with friends and cause trouble without having to be a Beatle. This image is a portrait of John and his influences told through a 4 piece band called Not the John’s (first album, The Daily Howl). Each member of the band is one of John’s many aliases. From left to right we have the Reverend Fred Ghurkin (seated), Johnny Rhythm, Fred Zimmerman, and the indomitable Dr. Winston O’Boogie.”

Edward Ward: “My drawing is called, Isn't it Good? I have no idea what I was trying to achieve.The woman in it is Maureen Cleave, who is one of an oft-speculated two people that Norwegian Wood may have been written about though she denies it.”

Sarah Doyle: “My painting is called Cat Kiss John Lennon. John Lennon was a cat lover since his childhood, growing up with 3 cats, he would cycle to the fishmongers each day to pick up fish scraps for his beloved pets. My painting is from a lovely photo of him with his cat affectionately bopping noses together, something cats will only do with trusted friends. I think this is probably one of the ten cats he owned when he was with his wife Cynthia."

John Lennon’s Not Dead will feature; drawings, paintings, photography, and collage. There will also be some specially made music and animation and some surprise performances. Because of social distancing there will be 4 Fab gatherings (some of which will be filmed and then shared on You Tube) rather than one big opening party. The Stash Gallery is inside Vout-O-Reenee's, The Crypt, 30 Prescot St, E1 8BB. Please note this celebration of John Winston Ono Lennon is unauthorized and 100 % unofficial.  Vout-O-Reenee's is a private members club and pre booking is essential. http://vout-o-reenees.com/events/john-lennon-is-not-dead-hes-80/ Buy your tickets: HERE

The show opens on Friday 2nd Oct and closes on Wednesday 28th Oct. Vout-O-Reene's is open Tues -Sat 5pm till Late.


Thursday, 27 August 2020

Four Fab Artists Talk About Their Contribution To An Exhibition Celebrating John Lennon

 

John Lennon Is Not Dead is an exhibition taking place at The Stash Gallery inside Vout-O-Reenee's. The exhibition features contributions from 80 esteemed artists who have either made a new work or unearthed something special to celebrate the 80th anniversary of John Lennon's birth. Four of the artists said a few words about what they're contributing...

1) Vanessa Winch (Artist): "I enjoyed the distraction during lockdown of reading through the lyrics of 'I Am The Walrus' and creating ideas to show off this great John Lennon song. I feel it hasn't dated, still as fresh as when it was written. Full of nonsense for the imagination. I felt my interpretation of the song was just to have fun with it, the Walrus with old style sailor tattoo for the song lyrics. A nod to John Lennon with his glasses in the bottle floating past."

2) Lee Maelzer, (Artist, mostly painter born and based in London.)

"A lot of my work deals with the psychology of absence. The impact and remnants of human activity on its environment. In this instance another pointless death of an undeserving person. The homes and objects of the famous are often fetishised, commodified and sold. Posthumously, they inexplicably gain in value and charisma, as though imbued with something of the people who used them. The famous Lennon piano is a kind of shrine that typifies the hollow monuments - either official or incidental - to loss. Also, I’ve always wanted to make a white painting."

3) Cathy Lomax (artist and director of Transition Gallery) "I am interested in how famous people continue to stay in the public consciousness after their death and how their biographies are often adapted to fit in with contemporary concerns. With this in mind my painting of John Lennon - Reimagined - is after a scene in Sam Taylor Wood’s 2009 film Nowhere Boy which focuses on John Lennon before he became famous. In the film Lennon is played by Aaron Johnson who went on to marry his director and become Aaron Taylor-Johnson. His version of Lennon is more handsome than the real man, ‘beauty and youth over dynamism’, as one reviewer put it. But what he lacks in the brittleness and essence of the real man he makes up for by making a new generation fall in love with (or at least know who) John Lennon is."

4)Klarita Pandolfi-Carr (artist/curator)
"When I think about John Lennon I am reminded not only of his body of work as a musician, not just about the tragic way he suddenly died, but also of his love story/artistic marriage with his wife, Yoko Ono. This digital collage intends to celebrate the creativity that flourished by the union of these two outstanding artists."

John Lennon’s Not Dead will feature; drawings, paintings, photography, and collage. There will also be some specially made music and animation and some surprise performances. Because of social distancing there will be 4 Fab gatherings (some of which will be filmed and then shared on You Tube) rather than one big opening party. The Stash Gallery is inside Vout-O-Reenee's, The Crypt, 30 Prescot St, E1 8BB. Please note this celebration of John Winston Ono Lennon is unauthorized and 100 % unofficial.  Vout-O-Reenee's is a private members club and pre booking is essential. http://vout-o-reenees.com/events/john-lennon-is-not-dead-hes-80/ Buy your tickets: HERE
The show opens on Friday 2nd Oct and closes on Wednesday 28th Oct. Vout-O-Reene's is open Tues -Sat 5pm till Late.



Lee
sent
22 hours ago


Thursday, 9 July 2020

10 THINGS I LOVE ABOUT - STEPHEN EVENS: EMPLOYEE OF THE MONTH ALBUM By John Robbins




1)The Cover
Hilarious. Stephen Gilchrist, the man behind Stephen Evens, gets into character as his alter ego before he plays a note. With a touch of Blue Steel attitude, a generous smudge of powder blue eye shadow and prodigious amounts of red lipstick, the suited and presumably booted Gilchrist gazes out at us from the cover, clearly ready to get to work.
2)The Title
‘Employee of the Month’ is the perfect name for an album all about escaping the drudgery of 9-5 existence and sticking two fingers up to the man.
3)The Cast
Stephen is one of annoyingly talented people who can play pretty much everything, and as well as writing much everything here he also lays down some heavy handed drumming, nimble guitar work and, of course, the characterful vocals. He has also, however, assembled a coterie of impressive talent to help out on the album. Regular Stephen Evens band members Jimi Scandal of REAL(S) (and many other bands) and Jen Macro of Hurtling and My Bloody Valentine’s touring bolster the guitar assault, alongside Ham Legion’s Nicholas J. Howiantz Jnr on bass. Anna Dodridge and Caroline Gilchrist from Hot Sauce Pony join as guests too, as do William D Drake of Cardiacs and Gabi Garbutt, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg really.
4)‘Dustbin Man’
First up is the anthemic ‘Dustbin Man’, a touching tribute to the working man and woman, as the Tory government heaps more and more shit on them from a great height. Beats clapping any day of the week.
5)‘Push Yr Thumb In Yr Eye’
After the solidarity and generous goodwill in evidence on the track one, it’s quite satisfying to encounter a bit of aggro on the next one. “You’re such a dirty little hog,” sings Stephen, “and I’d love to see you fry.” We’d love to know who he was singing about, as the band hit a slow, heavy grind.
6)William D Drake's Guest Spot On ‘Freakshow’
Anyone familiar with outsider cult heroes Cardiacs will immediately recognise the magical touch of William D Drake’s piano playing on this, one of two quieter breathers situated around the middle of the album.
7)George & Kathleen
This album has plenty of unexpected twists and turns, and after some of the heavier moments in the first half, the last thing we were expecting was a folk song with heaps of gooey romance contained within it. Particular mentions of honour to Elizabeth Calfe (cello) and Fiona Harrison (classical guitar), whose contributions lend the song some serious Nick Drake-style resonance.
8)‘I Hate Shop(I Am Shop)’
Kate Arnolds, Anna Dodridge, Gabi Garbutt, Caroline Gilchrist and Katie Wilson are all credited with backing vocals on this lurching, raucous, swaggerfest, really bringing it to life. There were a few sore throats the day after this, you’d have to guess.
9)‘Career Criminal'
One of the more low key songs, lurking near the end of the album, but with its neat groove and catchy chorus (“they gave me nine years”) it’s one of our favourites.
10)The Day I Burned My House Down
All great albums have to have a show stopping last track and the one that brings ‘Employee of the Month’ to a close is certainly a corker. Nicola Baigent on tenor and baritone saxes adds the extra ingredient as Howiantz, Macro and Scandal set the controls to epic. Nice work.


Text by John Robbins
Employee of the Month is available on CD/ Digital and vinyl from 
August on the ONOMATOPOEIA label.
09/07/2020

Saturday, 6 June 2020

Enemy At The Door (26 Episode TV series from 1978)


One of the best things about Enemy At The Door is the beautiful theme tune composed by Wilfred Josephs. The stories all take place on Guernsey between 1940 and 1943. Within those three years there are at least a dozen deaths, a rape, a raid, and a chess tournament. Everyone gets their wireless taken away, a Librarian is arrested, A cleaning lady has the baby of a German officer, a young girl has a breakdown, three people are sent to prison camps, two people step on land mines, coal is stolen, medicine is stolen and hens are stolen. For a short while the island has it's own Nazi whore house.
The series was produced by Michel Chapman who went on to produce The Bill. In my opinion, as a series, The Bill was ever so slightly more reliable than Enemy At The Door. Seven different directors were used on Enemy At The Door and there were eight different writers. Micheal Chapman wrote 7 of the shows. The most interesting episodes tend to be written by either N.J. Crisp (who also wrote; Colditz, Secret Army, and 66 episodes of Dixon of Dock Green) or James Doran (who wrote The Ipcress File). The two main stars Simon Cadell (who plays nasty Nazi, Reinicke) and Alfred Burke (who plays the thoughtful and sincere Major Richter) are very interesting to watch but neither of them are particularly convincing. Despite the fact both men are brilliant in almost everything else they did, sadly the scenes here were they argue are often unintentionally comic. The vast majority of the cast are brilliant; Simon Lack as Major Freidel, John Malcolm as Kluge, Bernard Horsfall as Dr Bernard Martel, Antonia Pemberton as Olive Martel, Anthony Head as Clive Martel, Richard Heffer as Peter Porteous. Everyone listed above was extremely impressive and perfectly cast. The series had some amazing guest stars too. It was a pleasure to see; Richard Pearson as William Clifford,

 Pam St Clement as Fat Molly, John Nettles as Roy Lewis, Martin Jarvis as Nils Borg, Gary Waldhorn as Teddy Lupus, Terrence Hardiman as Hauptmann von Bulow, Kenneth Cranham as Jack Foster, and maybe best of all, Alun Armstrong as Louis Mendoza. 
My favorite episodes were episode 9 ("The Jerrybag"), Episode 12 ("The Prussian Officer") and episode 25 ("The Education of Nils Borg").
This 8 DVD Disc Set contains some first class acting and has moments of brilliance. For more info on each episode visit: HERE


Tuesday, 2 June 2020

Clint Eastwood by Chris Hick





On Sunday 31st May movie icon Clint Eastwood turned 90. Going back more years than I care to remember; okay, for context, going back to the early 1980s when I was a teenager I discovered the wealth of cinema from international to arthouse to national, genre to Hollywood past and present. This coincided with the explosion of video shops popping up everywhere, when Radio Rentals was still in existence and VHS, Betamax and Phillips 2000 were battling for supremacy. This was before Blockbuster monopolised the market and video nasties were not yet called that, but readily available, and not under the counter. But there was one actor that stood out among them all - and that was Clint Eastwood. The sequel to Every Which Way But Loose (1977), Any Which You Can (1980) was released in cinemas. Both these films were slated by the critics and it was never really picked up at the time, nor since that both these films seemed to reference exploitation cinema that were earning a second life on the video shelves. In these films Clint had an ape, sorry orangutan companion, a foul mouthed Ma, an inept gang of Hell’s Angels and barroom brawls as well as plenty of country music in this road movie. During this period BBC1 would often show violent mainstream films from the 1960s and 70s every Monday night after the 9 o’clock news and I would look forward to every Monday night showing. Many of these films were Clint Eastwood’s. After seeing such films as the Italian Dollar trilogy (the films that launched Eastwood’s career), Coogan’s Bluff (1968), Joe Kidd (1972), Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1974) and The Eiger Sanction (1975) I thought he was the coolest actor around. He grizzled, sneered and ignored mainstream authority and would grow even more grizzled in his later years right up to his most recent performance in The Mule (2018) with his older years in such performances as Heartbreak Ridge (1986), Million Dollar Baby (2004) and Gran Torino (2008) being the best examples of Clint at his gruffest.



Nevertheless, Eastwood was no counter-culture anti-authoritarian figure as almost every film since his first starring role back in Hollywood in the western Hang ‘Em High (1968) demonstrated. This film was made to cash in on the success of the so-called ‘Spaghetti Westerns’. In it Eastwood plays a cowboy wrongfully hung by a lynch mob for cattle rustling. He survives the ordeal (saved by Western veteran Ben Johnson) and once he proves his innocence, dons a sheriff’s badge given to him by a hanging judge (Pat Hingle) he goes after those who had done him wrong. His next film was set in psychedelic San Francisco. in Coogan’s Bluff he plays an Arizona sheriff who pursues an escaped felon who has gone underground in the San Francisco hippy scene. From these two roles, made three years before he first holstered his Magnum .44 as ‘Dirty’ Harry Callahan, Eastwood was honing his establishment figure playing by his own rules. He, like John Wayne, that iconic right-wing cowboy before him, would be critical of the “long hairs” and “punks” in contemporary set films and the wild young wild kids in the westerns. But it is in the iconic Dirty Harry (1971) that the image of Eastwood, going beyond the Man With No Name or enigmatic and quiet gunslinger, would be established. Harry Callahan is a San Francisco police Inspector who is after a serial killer (wonderfully played by Andy Robinson), using his own vigilante methods to get the killer. From the opening scenes in which he shoots a thief, the icon of Dirty Harry Callahan is set. Whether it were the westerns or Dirty Harry, Eastwood’s films were reflecting the violence prevalent in America at the time. Vigilantism became a thing, consolidated in these films and the likes of Michael Winner’s Death Wish, as well as countless Blaxploitation films such as Shaft (1971) or Pam Grier films like Coffy (1973). Eastwood would go on to play Harry Callahan a further four times in: Magnum Force (1973), The Enforcer (1975), Sudden Impact (1983) and The Dead Pool (1988). Even in other films in which he plays a cop, such as The Gauntlet (1977) and Tightrope (1984) the character of Dirty Harry never seemed to be too far away. 




For many years Clint Eastwood has been responsible for keeping the western alive as a genre when others had dismissed it, or rather when Hollywood decided westerns were no longer a box-office draw. Only a handful of westerns were made in the 1980s, and fewer still in the 1990s. Films such as Young Guns (1988) attempted to make the western appealing to a younger generation featuring the so-called Brat Pack of actors. Although a box-office hit, if not a critical hit, it did not rejuvenate the western as a genre. When Eastwood approached Universal with David Webb Peoples’ script for ‘The William Munny Killings’ he had to fight to get it made, although he kept the project on ice for some years until he felt the time was right. This story became Unforgiven (1992) and earned four Academy Awards including the top three, Best Director, Best Actor and Best Film. This had been Eastwood’s first western since Pale Rider (1985) and re-booted his career as a front rank filmmaker, but had critical success with directing Bird (1988), the biopic of troubled jazz saxophonist Charlie Parker.

Of course it was in Italy that Eastwood made his name with the Dollar trilogy: A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). With these three films and the time he spent making films in Europe, not only did these films launch the career of Eastwood to stardom, but also the career of the Italian director Sergio Leone and the iconic music of Ennio Morricone. This was the birth of the Italian, or Spaghetti Westerns, European films that were shot in Spain, Italy or Yugoslavia to represent Wild West border towns. Over the next 10 years or so hundreds were made. When he returned to Hollywood his first Westerns emulated the Italian Western: Hang ‘Em High, Two Mules for Sister Sara (1970), Joe Kidd (1972) and High Plains Drifter (1973), but with The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976) Eastwood changed direction and made a more realistic Western, finally moving away from the style of the Italian Western. It was also made at a time when very few Westerns were being made. Since with his next westerns, Pale Rider and Unforgiven, Eastwood maintained this mythologising of the west as tough, dusty and harsh frontiers.




Of course he is best known as an actor, but over the past few years he has started to be recognised as a front rank director. Of course he was very influenced by Leone, but when he returned to America to make Hang ‘Em High he agreed to be directed by Ted Post. A mostly routine director, Eastwood was familiar with working with him on ‘Rawhide’, the long running TV western series in which he played Rowdy Yates between 1959-1965. For his next film, Coogan’s Bluff, he was directed by Don Siegel, a director who would be the biggest influence on Eastwood becoming a director and would prove to be his mentor. Along with Sam Peckinpah, Siegel was a director who could handle action and violence probably better than any other director at the time. He went on to direct four more of Eastwood’s films: Two Mules for Sister Sara, The Beguiled (1971), Dirty Harry and Escape From Alcatraz (1979). On his return to Hollywood in 1968 Eastwood set up his own company, Malpaso (meaning “bad pass”) and within a couple of years he had autonomy to make what he wanted, with the films usually released through Warner Brothers. This gave him the opportunity to direct, with the psychological thriller, Play Misty for Me (1971) being his first film as director, filmed around his home town of Carmel, California, where he eventually became the town’s Mayor in 1986. It wouldn’t be long before he was making some real bona fide classics such as High Plains Drifter, a classic revenge western. Many have labelled Eastwood the director as a good director, but not up there with the likes of John Ford, William Wyler or Anthony Mann. Films he has helmed, such as Bird, High Plains Drifter, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Unforgiven, Mystic River (2003) and Million Dollar Baby (2004) say otherwise. More recently, with his advancing years, Eastwood is mostly behind the camera rather than in front. This has in no way diminished his career, or his reputation as first flight director as Mystic River, the duo Iwo Jima films, Changeling (2008), Invictus (2009), J. Edgar (2011), American Sniper (2014) and Sully (2016) show, all of which starring the biggest names in Hollywood. Whatever he is thought of as a director, his impeccable instinct for the film he is making and the material shows that Eastwood has quality X, an undefinable ability to tune the right film as he showed with Unforgiven and more recently with 15:17 to Paris (2017), a film that had the audacity to star the three US Marines: Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler and Alex Skarlatos who were on leave and interrailing around Europe when they happened to be in the right place at the right time and apprehended the Morrocan Islamic terrorist, El Khazzani who was about to cause mass casualties on a train and wrestled him to the ground. Months later they were awarded the highest honour in France with the Légion d’honneur. The final shot shows the three men and the British tourist Chris Norman who helped being awarded the medal by French President Françoise Holland which is depicted in the film. This end is jarring as the events that took place in the film are re-created by Eastwood just a couple of years after the actual events and with the award ceremony is the realisation that these are the real life heroes as we follow their trials and tribulations from childhood to this defining event. Politics aside, it shows Eastwood’s ability to tap into making a film at the right moment, even as an octogenarian. 

Of his later career, for my money, Gran Torino (2008) is his best film. Although not the first, nor the last film of his to do so, it is a realisation how an older, grizzled and cynical man overcomes the natural ageing process, his ingrained racism and prejudice to still make a difference. His most recent film is Richard Jewell (2019) is another film dealing with terrorism: this time the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Centennial Stadium bombing. Hopefully, although he is now 90-years-old there is still life in the old dog yet. Even if Clint Eastwood makes no more films, his legacy as an actor, an icon and the 38 films he has directed will live on beyond his time on this mortal earth.





Text by Chris Hick 2020