Monday, August 27, 2012

1,000th Post: Where's Our Eastwood?

Since May, 2006, I have now posted 1000 times to this blog.  It's hard to believe.  I'd be the first to admit that the quality of the postings is variable.  There are some that are simply announcements or were tossed off quickly just to keep the blog from going stale.  However, there are entries I'm proud of, even if they're becoming fewer and farther between.

I once asked on this blog, "Where's our Brando?"  That discussion was about how characters in animation are conceived and executed.  I'm now going to ask, "Where's our Clint Eastwood?"

I mistakenly wrote Eastwood off years ago during his Dirty Harry period.  I had no interest in movies about right wing vigilantes.  This summer, I have watched a large number of films that Eastwood directed, and I have to say that I was very impressed and embarrassed by my earlier response to him.

What does Eastwood have to do with animation?  Unfortunately, nothing.  However, Eastwood's strengths as a director point out the shortcomings of animation directors currently working.

Eastwood is tremendously eclectic.  He moves between genres but even within genres he's not afraid to take different approaches.  The same director made a mid-western romance, The Bridges of Madison County, and a war movie from the Japanese perspective, Letters from Iwo Jima.  He's made films set in working class Massachusetts (Mystic River), in post-apartheid South Africa (Invictus), in the boxing world (Million Dollar Baby), in 1920s Los Angeles (Changeling), Savannah (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil) and the old west (Unforgiven).  His film's characters have been country and western singers (Honkytonk Man), jet pilots (Space Cowboys), retired auto workers (Gran Torino), transvestites (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil), escaped criminals (A Perfect World), over-hyped war heroes (Flags of our Fathers), film directors (White Hunter, Black Heart)  and reluctant psychics (Hereafter).

The range of Eastwood's films and the characters in them is immensely broad and he's sympathetic to characters from all walks of life and in all kinds of circumstances.

While live action films can be made faster than animated features and Eastwood may be an exception even in the live action world, there is nobody directing animated features who comes close to Eastwood's range.  He does have the advantage of not having to include children in his audience, even though children sometimes feature prominently in the films.  In Hereafter, a young twin has to deal with the death of his brother.  In Honkytonk Man, a young boy has to watch his uncle made poor choices and succumb to disease.  In A Perfect World, a kidnap victim comes to have feelings for his captor, who seems to understand him better than his own family.  Because Eastwood doesn't have to simplify his films to satisfy children, his characters are free to exist ambiguously, having to make choices that are not clearly good or bad, but simply the best they can do under the circumstances.  And the endings are free to be downbeat if that's what the story demands.

There's something else interesting.  Eastwood isn't a writer.  While I am an auteurist from way back, and while I applaud the existence of personal films in animation and live action, Eastwood's approach is to find a script that he finds interesting, rather than create or shape the material from scratch.  I think this input from other minds gives Eastwood something to wrestle with, rather than letting him fall into familiar patterns.  In animation these days, even if the director hasn't originated the story, the story department is likely made up of people with the same frame of reference as the director.  That, plus the economic pressure to hit the family audience and gross hundreds of millions of dollars, reduces animated features to a very narrow area.

There are animated features that have broken the mold, but they tend to come from other cultures: Persepolis (Iran and France), Spirited Away (Japan), Mary and Max (Australia), The Secret of Kells (Ireland) and The Illusionist (France and Scotland).  It's wonderful that these films were made and that we've gotten to see them in North America, but it's frustrating that North America is not capable of significant variety in animated features.

I have to admit that live action films and graphic novels hold more interest for me these days, due to their variety of subject matter and point of view, than animated features.  Currently, animated features are successful at the box office, so there is no incentive for anyone to rock the boat.  Hollywood is famous for riding trends until they die, so until animated features consistently tank at the box office, I don't expect to see a change.  However, while the medium may be advancing technically, it is pretty stagnant in other ways and that's a shame.

I wonder if we'll ever reach a point where animation has a Brando directed by an Eastwood?

11 comments:

GW said...

Isao Takahata seems to be the king thematically. He's directed adventure fantasies, comedic dramas, serious dramas and literature adaptations. He is the one and only argument for feature animation on a thematic basis. But it's worth pointing out that feature animation is a microcosm when it comes to directors with creative control who've directed more than a couple films.

I have to say that I think that the idea that taking source from different writers isn't necessarily the answer. I think that it's possble for the director to be creative with their own ideas, but they have to be willing to keep their own personality from overwhelming them from making certain decisions.

Daniel Best said...

Congrats on getting to 1,000, but if I didn't get an Eastwood then why should you? But then I'd have settled for an Ed Wood...

Thad said...

The question with a more obvious answer is: "Does animation want an Eastwood?"

That answer is most emphatically no.

chris said...

Respectfully, I'm not sure I get what you mean, Thad.

You don't want animation to have a director who's made a variety of films, or you don't want animation to have a director who makes the kinds of films Eastwood makes?

I always find your point of view interesting, so I'd like you to elaborate.

Thad said...

Chris, for clarification, I would love an equivalent to Eastwood exist in animation. But the idea of the medium itself (in commercial/mainstream animation, anyway) actively allowing an Eastwood to exist is absurd. All we get are smatterings of potential Eastwoods sabotaged by suits or ego.

Anonymous said...

Remember, America's greatest and most successful film director, William Wyler, ALSO didn't write. And yet he's won, and directed films that have won, more awards than any director in history. And like Eastwood, he was meticulously prepared. These days, animated features by committee are continually remade by correction rather than a strong point of view. Most current animation directors don't even know how the films are actually made (no, that is neither a joke or an overstatement). Eastwood plans, and rarely, if ever, goes over budget or schedule, and usually sticks to a 8 to 5 shooting schedule. He also hires people and lets them do their job--directing rather than micromanaging out of panic or lack of planning.

Great post.

JPilot said...

Let's get it started then. First, get an empty chair...

Anonymous said...

Lol! Then ramble on like a senile fool to showcase mitten's and the gNOp's culture of celebrity worship.

Torgo25 said...

In terms of genres, I think the late Osamu Dezaki counts. He directed science fiction (Space Adventure Cobra), drama/tragedy (Nobody's Boy - Remi), historical fiction (The Rose of Versailles), sports (Tomorrow's Joe, Aim for the Ace), adventure (Takarajima/Treasure Island), romance/lesbian relationships (Oniisama e...), medical drama (Black Jack), action/assassins/crime (Golgo 13), fantasy (The Snow Queen), mecha (Mighty Orbots), and religion (In the Beginning: The Bible Stories).

Anonymous said...

But Wyler had a wider berth of genres and was a far superior director. His work was also more mature in it's handling of every subject, and he had great respect for his audience.

Brubaker said...

Dezaki also directed a fair share of comedy. "Tensai Bakabon" comes to mind...