BOTTOM
LINE:
Clint Eastwood is back
doing what he does best, playing it tough; “Gran Torino”
has a strong story, great characters, a moral centre and is surprisingly
humorous despite its slow pace.
THE
GOOD: If there’s
one thing that Clint Eastwood is famous for, it’s his tough
guy persona, and it’s back in spades in “Gran Torino”.
He plays cranky Korean War veteran Walt Kowalski who wants to be
left alone, even by his own family whom he has no real connection
with. When a family of Asians move in next door, Walt’s life
begins to change as he slowly becomes involved in their lives after
he indirectly comes to their aid when they are attacked by a gang
who happen to take the fight over on to his lawn. Walt, brandishing
a shot gun, utters to the gang members in Eastwood’s trademark
style, “get off my lawn!”. As he begins to interact
with his new friends, Walt begins to find an inner peace and contentment
he has never felt, and in the end he is willing to sacrifice his
life to ensure their safety. The surprising aspects of “Gran
Torino” lie in its character-driven moments, showing the developing
relationships between Walt and his neighbours, and in particular
Thao (Bee Vang) who tried to steal Walt’s 1972 Gran Torino
as part of a forced initiation in to the gang. Walt eventually befriends
Thao and the two develop an unlikely mentor-mentee bond. Eastwood
has surrounded himself with a cast of unknowns who more than hold
the screen with him, including a very impressive Ahney Her who plays
Sue Lor, the first of Walt’s neighbours who befriends him,
and Christopher Carley who plays a very persistent Father Janovich
who promised Walt’s wife that he would watch out for him after
she died. The film is quite humorous in parts; Walt’s old-school
inflexibility leads to some fantastically funny dialogue when he
interacts with not only his Asian neighbours, but also with his
family and the neighbourhood priest. Perhaps the most interesting
aspect of all is that Eastwood does not take the easy option and
go all Dirty Harry in the climax; what he gives us is quite moving
and tragic, but strangely compelling and right for the character
of Walt. “Gran Torino” is humanistic at its centre,
but delivers both humour and drama in a well blended mix that is
quite satisfying.