Gran Torino
Director: Clint Eastwood
Cert: 15
Time: 1 hr 56 mins
Rumour has is that this might, at 78 years of age, be Clint’s last major acting role. Even if it isn’t if still feels like an elegy - to American ideals, to a way of life and an iconic career.
The narrative follows Walt Kowalski (Eastwood) a racist veteran of the Korean War stranded in his old Detroit neighbourhood, where jobs and white neighbours have moved out and the oriental Hmongs, have moved in. At times acidly funny it helps that the film becomes a story of a bigots redemption; as gangs threaten the lives of his immediate neighbours Kowalski comes to their aid and the grumbling hard man softens.
Eventually one reaches a point where the story is trying to have its cake and eat it; on the one hand a pious fable of a racist learning the error of his ways on the other a revenge fantasy in the mould of Death Wish. Thankfully Eastwood is too subtle a director to allow either strand to triumph with an unexpected and thought provoking denouement.
Rating: 3/5
Patrons: 25
CA