Tag Archives: clint-eastwood

‘Jonah Hex’: Dead Man Walking, By Kurt Loder

The venerable comic-book cowboy comes to life … sort of. Josh Brolin in “Jonah Hex” Photo: Warner Bros. “Jonah Hex” is about as anti- as a hero can get. It’s not just his chewed-up cowboy hat, his bullet-riddled duster and his perma-surly disposition. It’s the melted skin running down one side of his face and the ugly hole torn in the flesh next to his mouth (which makes whiskey-drinking a messy enterprise, but not — as we see just before he shoots up a barroom full of bad guys — an impossible one). In cooking down 38 years’ worth of DC comics for “Jonah Hex,” the new movie, director Jimmy Hayward and his writers have produced a lumpy soup of western action and supernatural shenanigans, heavily spiced with narrative confusion. The story leaps back and forth in time, and while the picture is sometimes funny, possibly intentionally, at some points it’s anybody’s guess what’s going on. In playing Jonah, Josh Brolin is stuck with a character whose facial constriction reduces him to little more than a walking bad attitude — he’s like Clint Eastwood’s old Man with No Name in the Sergio Leone westerns but without the warmth. The time is just after the Civil War (at least when it’s not during the Civil War). We learn that Jonah was framed for the betrayal of his Confederate battle unit, which resulted in the death of his friend, Jeb Turnbull (Jeffrey Dean Morgan). Jeb’s demented father, Quentin (John Malkovich in full cuckoo mode), retaliated by killing Jonah’s wife and son, and disfiguring his face with a red-hot branding iron. Now (or sometimes now) Jonah roams the West as a bad-ass bounty hunter, his only love connection a beautiful whore named Lilah (Megan Fox). When Ulysses S. Grant (Aidan Quinn), president of the newly reunited States, learns that Turnbull is creating a “super-weapon” that will be a “nation-killer,” he recruits Jonah to stop him. Our battered hero is well-equipped to do so. After a close call with death some years back, Jonah was left with one foot in the spirit world; and so while he spends much of the movie being shot and beaten, he appears to be unkillable. He’s attended by a pack of hellhounds (“I wouldn’t try to pet ’em if I was you”) and has the useful gift of bringing dead men back to life with a touch of his hand. (“I’m sorry I killed you,” he tells one corpse, after raising him from the grave. Says the dead guy: “I’d better be getting back under ground.”) Jonah also has a taste for esoteric weaponry — saddle-mounted Gatling guns, dynamite-firing crossbow pistols — and a talent for dodging bullets by simply leaning back a bit to let them fly by (past our madly rolling eyes). The lovely Lilah is no slouch in the slick department, either: When she and Jonah are handcuffed to an overhead rod, the cuffs suddenly snap free, and she brandishes a lock pick. “My mama didn’t raise no fool,” she says. (To which we reply, “What the hell … ?”) Despite the picture’s wall-to-wall uproar — train-jackings, bullet storms, incessant detonations — there’s little excitement to it. The action is furious from the outset and remains at that level throughout, increasingly diluting its intended effect. And the dialogue, which I take to be satirical, never quite meshes with the film’s heavy violence. Like its half-dead protagonist, the movie never comes completely alive. Check out everything we’ve got on “Jonah Hex.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos Exclusive ‘Jonah Hex’ Clip MTV Rough Cut: Megan Fox In ‘Jonah Hex’ Related Photos ‘Jonah Hex’

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‘Jonah Hex’: Dead Man Walking, By Kurt Loder

Plummeting Marijuana Prices Create A Panic In Calif.

Plummeting Marijuana Prices Create A Panic In Calif. added by: CarlosBobthe3rd

How children are brainwashed in Iran

Acting on orders from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to counter the “soft war” launched by Iran's enemies after last year's disputed presidential election, the Basij militia have beefed up their ideological indoctrination of schoolchildren. Brigadier General Mohammad-Saleh Jokar, who heads the Students Basij, told the Mehr news agency last week that in the last six months, 6,000 “resistance centers” have been established in elementary schools in order to fully prepare children for joining Basij units when they transfer to middle schools at the age of 12. The idea of expanding Basij activities was first announced last November, when Jokar told Mehr that “schoolchildren are more susceptible at a young age than at any other time in their lives…and we want to promote and instill into elementary schoolchildren the ideas of the revolution and Basij.” added by: crystalman

The Internet in 1969

I actually remember this. I saw it at a drive in… 1970…i think. Probably during a Clint Eastwood marathon: fist full of dollars for a few dollars more the good,the bad, and the ugly…freakin epic movie. added by: onemalefla

Invictus on DVD: How Good is Matt Damon? (Hint: Very)

Clint Eastwood’s Invictus may well be remembered for bringing the Nelson Mandela rise-to-power story to Western audiences, or for being the film Matt Damon was Oscar-nominated for instead of the one he should’ve been nominated for ( The Informant! ). But it should be remembered as the film that gave many Americans their first glimpse of rugby — which, I must say, makes hyper-padded, five-second-play American football look like an old ladies’ bridge match. We get to see only enough rugby to make us wonder what the hell the rules are, and how in the hell the players survive even one season.

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Invictus on DVD: How Good is Matt Damon? (Hint: Very)

On This Day: Did We Mention It’s Taylor Kitsch Day?

Happy April 8, dear reader! Time to join Movieline on another breezy expedition through the historical arcana and milestones that helped shaped the pop culture you know and love today. Read on for more good fortune to happen upon Taylor Kitsch, a look back at Charlie Chaplin’s second career and memories of Clint Eastwood’s third career.

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On This Day: Did We Mention It’s Taylor Kitsch Day?

Top Escape Artists You've Never Heard Of

Thanks to Clint Eastwood and papier mache, we've all heard of “Escape from Alcatraz.” And “The Texas Seven” escape isn't even a decade old. Yet some of the heros behind harrowing prison escapes aren't the ones with an IMDB credit. View

How Pokemon Should Have Been

Few people know that Clint Eastwood filmed a full length Pokemon movie. (Via: Giagantor .) View

Access Hollywood – Clint Eastwood On His Career: ‘I Had a Lucky Hand’

Clint Eastwood talks with Access about his long and successful career in the industry at the DVD release of “Clint Eastwood: 35 Films 35 Years at Warner Bros.” in Los Angeles. Add this to your queue Added: Fri Feb 19 03:07:05 UTC 2010 Air date: Thu Feb 18 00:00:00 UTC 2010 Duration: 01:50

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Access Hollywood – Clint Eastwood On His Career: ‘I Had a Lucky Hand’

DVDo’s and DVDon’ts for Feb. 16th

As the post-V.D. doldrums start to take affect, worry not gentle reader. We've got new DVDs out today and the DVDo's and DVDont's for you. DVDo's -Black Dynamite is one of the funnier “we know we're kidding” exploitation films, but shockingly one of the most enjoyable in the recent years of faux-Grindhouses. -Clint Eastwood: 35 Films in 35 Years at Warner Brothers is what you think it is. And has Every Which Way But Loose. -Hunger is out on regular DVD and Blu-Ray for your Michael Fassbender needs. -Ran is out on Blu-Ray. -The Ladykillers is too.