Clint Plays Clint Like No One Else Can

Clint Eastwood plays himself in his new movie, “The Mule.” He plays himself in the same sense that Cary Grant played himself in “North By Northwest” and “The Philadelphia Story.” Not many actors can say that.

Whether peering out from under his flat cowboy hat, or down the barrel of his .44 Magnum, Clint plays Clint. And that’s that.

Eastwood is also 88 years old. Rather than go down the “Last Vegas” or “Dirty Grandpa” route, of forcing elderly men to behave like 20-something morons and asking the audience to snigger, Eastwood offers up a story about an elderly man whose outward appearance of confidence and success is belied by his manifest failures in life.

It’s really a meditation on aging and on death, and a rather graceful one at that.

But it’s also a Clinty movie. That means that Earl Stone (played to rickety perfection by Eastwood), whose business and home are being foreclosed on, who is actively disliked by most of his extended family, and whose entire net worth fits into the back of a 1970s Ford pickup, decides to pick up a few bucks by running loads of cocaine from El Paso to Chicago for a drug cartel.

And since it’s a Clinty movie that also means some action. Such as:

Dead body in trunk. Fun at the skeet shooting range. Mean-looking guys in garages. “Girls Gone Wild” - style party scene at the cartel bosses’ lair. Minor nekkidity that is absolutely critical to the plot. And the plot doesn’t get in the way of the story too much.

There are a couple of laughs as well, of the “Can You Believe This Old So-and-So?” variety and one genuinely funny gag involving the cartel men and what happens when you bug the cab of an old fella’s pickup.

Is “The Mule” a great film? No, it’s a pretty good film. It doesn’t insult the audience, or pummel them with special effects and loud noises. The characters are exaggerated but not to the point of caricature, and the entire thing is well-paced.

Most of all, “The Mule”  shows real people dealing with the end of life.

A side note:  Apple Cinemas in Barkhamsted is a very comfortable movie theater. Giant seats with trays, plenty of leg room, and apparently they now offer beer and wine at some shows.

 

“The Mule” is playing widely.

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