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Gran Torino Movie Review
Gran Torino Review
"Gran Torino" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Clint EastwoodProducer : Jenette Kahn,Tim Moore,Bruce Berman
Screenwiter : Nick Schenk
Starring : Clint Eastwood,Christopher Carley,Bee Vang,Ahney Her,John Carroll Lynch
Do you miss Archie Bunker? Are you curious to find out how Carroll O'Connor's
stone-cold bigot would have reacted to our current, culturally diverse society?
And did you ever dream of seeing racist old Archie packing heat as he spewed
bile all over the "spooks," "gooks," and other non-Caucasians who were unlucky
enough to cross his path? Then Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino is the movie for
you.
Walt Kowalski (Eastwood) served his time in the military, paid his dues at the
auto plant -- American cars only, of course -- and wants to spend his days as a
widower in peace. He is disgusted by his ignorant, oafish sons and their
selfish children -- the ugliest characters you'll see on screen this year. But
his disdain isn't limited to kin. Walt also hates the "eggroll," "fish-head"
"Charlie Chans" who've moved into his blue-collar Detroit suburb.
Walt's worst nightmare comes true one evening when Thao (Bee Vang), a painfully
shy Hmong teenager, tries to boost the old man's vintage Gran Torino as part of
a gang initiation. Walt catches Thao in the act, bringing shame to the family.
To pay off the debt, Thao begins shadowing Walt so he can learn to grow up and
be a man (translation: hate people with a passion).
This odd-couple pairing has powered many a comedy, but the laughs in Torino are
unintentional. Eastwood plays his material very seriously, and I believe he
thinks we'll be moved as Thao accepts more responsibility and Walt grows less
intolerant. But the storytelling is plodding and ham-fisted, and Torino ends up
spinning its wheels.
Eastwood does do something unique in Gran Torino -- he surrounds himself with
rank amateurs, from "intimidating" gangbangers straight out of central casting
to his neighbors who, in time, will learn to respect the curmudgeon living next
door. Vang, in particular, is shockingly blasé and uncomfortable delivering
lines. Character actor John Carroll Lynch, meanwhile, is miscast as Walt's
racist, Italian barber. And I felt sorry for apple-cheeked Christopher Carley,
who plays an optimistic parish priest. The character serves two purposes.
Eastwood enjoys having Walt talk down to whippersnapper cast members, and the
idea of challenging religion has become a constant through the director's
recent pictures.
But Nick Schenk has penned a graceless and insensitive script littered with
clunkers that are meant to pass as life lessons handed down from one generation
to the next. "Sounds like you know more about death than you do living,"
Carley's priest utters to Walt over drinks at the local watering hole (where,
coincidentally, the men gather during the day to share racist jokes). And in
return, Clint squints. It's pretty much his lone response through much of
Torino, until the credits, when he sings the film's theme song. That's when
you'll wince.
Where are the American-made tool belts?
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell
Sean; Your a waste of space. me thinks you do protest too loudly about
minorities. Are you nappy haired?
Sean ;
Thanks for being so politically correct, for the benefit of our sensitive
society. I bet you don't find John Travolta or even Maddona a little crass.
What a hypocrite! get a life or different job.
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