Clint Eastwood rips Hollywood’s sequel and remake addiction: ‘I long for the good old days’

Clint Eastwood rips Hollywood’s sequel and remake addiction: ‘I long for the good old days’

Clint Eastwood is channeling his “Get off my lawn!” character from “Gran Torino.”

In a new interview, the 95-year-old actor and director slammed Hollywood’s growing reliance on sequels and remakes.

“My philosophy is: do something new or stay at home,” the Oscar winner told Kuria, an Austrian newspaper.

Clint Eastwood recently says he longs for “the good old days” when Hollywood made more original films. Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

“I long for the good old days when screenwriters wrote movies like ‘Casablanca’ in small bungalows on the studio lot. When everyone had a new idea,” added Eastwood, whose career spans seven decades. 

“We live in an era of remakes and franchises. I’ve shot sequels three times, but I haven’t been interested in that for a long while.”

Eastwood is likely referring to the 1970s and ’80s “Dirty Harry” movie series, in which he starred in four sequels: “Magnum Force,” “The Enforcer,” “Sudden Impact” and “The Dead Pool.”

The man puts his money where his mouth is. Last year, Eastwood directed “Juror No. 2,” an acclaimed original courtroom thriller starring Nicholas Hoult. 

While the film made the National Board of Review’s top 10 list, it did not receive a wide release in the US. It grossed $24 million overseas.

Eastwood directed and starred in “Gran Torino.” ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

Eastwood, who’s won four Academy Awards for the films “Million Dollar Baby” and “Unforgiven,” says he won’t retire for “a long time.”

“There’s no reason why a man can’t get better with age,” the “Mystic River” director said. “And I have much more experience today. Sure, there are directors who lose their touch at a certain age, but I’m not one of them.”

Clint Eastwood has been working in Hollywood for seven decades. Courtesy Everett Collection

A secret to his longevity, Eastwood says, are the work habits he learned early in his career as an actor.

“As an actor, I was still under contract with a studio, was in the old system, and thus forced to learn something new every year,” he said. 

“And that’s why I’ll work as long as I can still learn something, or until I’m truly senile.”

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