Gran Torino: DVD, Blu-ray Movie Review (2009)
"Gran Torino"
Directed by Clint Eastwood, written by Nick Schenk, 114 minutes, rated R.
Would somebody please hire Clint Eastwood to stare down the recession, narrow his eyes at it and lift a loaded shotgun at it?
He can shoot if he wants, but if his performance in his new movie “Gran Torino” is any indication, he won’t need to. As this film and a good deal of the actor’s career proves, he could scare the hell out of the shrinking economy with a mere sneer.
Decked out in full Dirty Harry mode is Eastwood, who directs himself in the role of Walt Kowalski, a proud American and die-hard racist who worked his entire life at the Ford Motor Company and who lives in a part of Detroit that increasingly is turning into a community of Asians.
Walt is having none of that. In fact, he’s so aggressive about his dislike of the Asian community, he’s not above walking over to his neighbor’s lawn and spitting on it while one of the home’s inhabitants, an elderly Asian woman, looks on in disgust.
Not that she’s having any of him. Since a good deal of the movie is charged with an unexpected sense of humor, the woman spits back, Walt hurls a few racial slurs at her and on he goes about his day, which usually involves spending time on his porch with his dog Daisy while drinking beer in the wake of his wife’s recent death.
From his perch on his porch, Walt observes the world around him with contempt. Since nobody can live up to his standards, his sour face and ugly disposition are a mainstay (often humorously so), with the lot of it turning into a full-boiled rage when one of his neighbor’s kids, a sensitive teen-ager named Thao (Bee Vang), first tries to steal his vintage Gran Torino, and then when Thao is pulled out of his home by the gang of Asians who ordered him to steal the car. Their idea is to turn Thao into a “man” by forcing him to join their gang. Since their struggle crosses the line onto Walt’s lawn, out he comes with rifle in hand.
What springs from this is predictable, sure, but it’s no less satisfying. The Asian community Walt long has vilified starts to lift him up as a hero of the neighborhood for helping Thao--a bounty of food comes his way. Walt doesn’t want any of it--he can’t stand these people, or any other race, for that matter. But when Thao’s sister, Sue (Ahney Her, excellent), works her no-nonsense magic on him, lives start to change as gang threats start to build.
Although he has gone on record to say that this will be his last acting role (we’ll see--and hope that’s not the case), what a way to go out. Beyond how good Eastwood is in the role--and he’s very, very good here, boiling into one character all of the elements we’ve come to love about the actor during his storied career--“Gran Torino” won the weekend box office, and it turns out to be Eastwood’s largest opening ever for a movie in which he’s the lead. On paper, that sounds like all the makings for a swell swan song, but nobody is going to want him to get too comfortable and enjoy it.
At least not yet.
Grade: A-
Blu-ray Features:
- Manning The Wheel: The Meaning Of Manhood As Reflected In American Car Culture
- Gran Torino: More Than A Car: Visit Detroit And The Woodward Dream Cruise
- The Eastwood Way: Exploring The Actor/Director's Filmmaking Process Up Close
- Exclusive Features Vis Blu-ray Live
View the trailer below:
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