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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
02.12.2008
The Worst Cinematic Trend of the Year

When Ed Harris decided that producing, directing, and starring in Appaloosa wasn't enough for him, and he needed to co-write and sing the movie's theme song ("You'll Never Leave My Heart") over the credits, it was a painful, but endurable, event. The song includes lyrics such as these (he's referring, rather ungallantly, to co-star Renee Zellweger's character)

Being scared and lonely, acting so darn loose
Screwin' who you want to and believing you're excused

and Harris's singing voice might be charitably described as unmemorable. But listening to the song is not an existentially scarring experience.

The same cannot be said of what I just underwent at a screening of Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino. Like Harris with Appaloosa, Eastwood produced, directed, and starred in the film, and like him, he co-wrote and sang the song ("Gran Torino") that plays as the credits roll. Unlike Harris though, his performance could not, even charitably, be described as "unmemorable." See if you can make it to the part where he sings that his heart is "locked in a gran torino. It beats a lonely rhythm all night long." This is William Shatner "Rocket Man" territory we're entering, but much, much less enjoyable.

The brave of heart can find Harris's vocal stylings here, and Eastwood's here. You've been forewarned.

And, yes, I know that technically a trend is supposed to require three instances. But there was no way I was going to wait until Sly Stallone mumbled his way through the theme to Rocky Balboa Returns before speaking out.

--Christopher Orr

Posted: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 2:56 PM with 19 comment(s)

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boneill said:

Orr-

Clint Eastwood is allowed to do whatever he wants.  End of discussion.  

December 2, 2008 3:16 PM

adaglas said:

I hear Christopher Nolan was this close to covering the old Batman TV show theme for "The Dark Knight."

December 2, 2008 3:42 PM

williamyard said:

I for one cannot wait until the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences creates men's and women's Decathlon Academy Awards to recognize those brave, talented individuals who take movie multi-tasking to its inevitable heights by single-handedly performing ten separate cinematic functions in the same film.

A scoring system will be needed, similar to that used in the Olympic Games for the men's decathlon. Imagine the tense scene as the nominees are being announced at the awards ceremony: will Ben Stiller's epic make-up work in "Splooge" carry him to victory, or will voters overlook Robert Redford's over-the-top costume design in "The Old Farrier" to make him the sentimental winner? On the ladies' side, can Madonna overcome her questionable casting choices (e.g., three Rastafarian midgets) in her "Heidi Fleiss" biopic or will Heidi Fleiss' tuneless, tortured warblings over the credits doom this "Madonna" auteur?

One day Harris and Eastwood may be slurred (unfairly, it sez here) as over-specialists afraid to fully explore their craft.

December 2, 2008 3:48 PM

mghogwild said:

Is Clint going for a Tom Waits' sound?

December 2, 2008 3:55 PM

iambiguous said:

Maybe. But let's not forget how many folks found the vocal stylings of Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen a bit hard to take.

Even Johnny Cash was dismissed by some because his vocal range was so....limited?

Yet all three were enormously influencial on the music scene.

It's all in the ear of the beholder, of course.

george   walton

December 2, 2008 4:05 PM

Rhubarbs said:

I think that after composing the closing theme to "Unforgiven":

www.youtube.com/watch

Eastwood can pretty much do whatever he wants over the closing credits to his movies without being lumped in with any other actor-turned-director's vanity project. Eastwood is a reasonably accomplished musician, so the "Gran Torino" thing represents an artistic failure, not a narcissistic excess.

If there's a trend here, maybe it's lesser talents like Ed Harris fancying themselves the next Eastwood. Are there two other examples to make this an official trend?

December 2, 2008 4:32 PM

drwohl said:

Ed Harris' singing at the end of Appaloosa was endurable only because it was, well, at the end.  It was excruciating, particularly since I (like Homer Simpson) insist on staying through the credits.  

Now, even a supposed professional can put up an over-the-credits howler. Witness Sir Elton's nauseating ode to The Drover.

December 2, 2008 4:39 PM

mattnewman said:

But how was the movie itself? I heard it was pretty disappointing.

December 2, 2008 4:50 PM

mrmonster said:

He sounds like one of the Muppets.

December 2, 2008 5:17 PM

williamyard said:

Ed Harris probably caught the bug when he hummed "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" during a scene in "The Right Stuff."

Am I alone in prefering Malcolm McDowell's "Singing in the Rain" in "A Clockwork Orange" to Gene Kelly's earlier version?

And who among us does not fondly remember the young victim crooning along to Tom Petty's "American Girl" moments before her abduction in "Silence of the Lambs"?

I heard that Bruce Willis had covered "Under the Boardwalk" but then I had the appropriate memory brain cells deleted so now I can't remember having heard that.

I have not yet heard Anal Cunt's cover of the Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive" but I plan to do so as soon as practicable.

You do not want your woman to witness williamyard's karaoke version of "Sexual Healing," after which she will be your woman no mo'.

December 2, 2008 5:31 PM

rfiore said:

If you're going to talk about Clint Eastwood's singing career you would have to start with Paint Your Wagon, which also included the vocal stylings of Lee Marvin.

December 2, 2008 8:46 PM

wldctfan142 said:

How well i remember eastwood singing *i was born under a wandering star*.

Orr, even though you may not like his singing, you could have phrased it a bit differently. Your way reminds me of when larry holmes uttered his infamous quote that marciano couldn't carry his jock strap. As far as i'm concerned, though there is a great deal of truth in what larry said, -for me, its a certainty since larry had one of the best left jab right cross combo's in the history of the ring. Rocky would have been hard-pressed to get inside, and in my opinion he wouldn't have been able to-he phrased it poorly. To be fair, as we all know, he said it in the heat of the moment just after he'd lost a decision to michael spinks, thus denying holmes the chance to tie marciano's record of 49-0. To larry's credit, he's since admitted that his words were unduly harsh.

Anyway, Orr, every time you critique someone it comes across as personal.

December 2, 2008 9:40 PM

iambiguous said:

Williamyard writes:

Am I alone in prefering Malcolm McDowell's "Singing in the Rain" in "A Clockwork Orange" to Gene Kelly's earlier version?

George:

No, but Alex's version is far more surreal [and thus far more striking] because, unlike Mr. Kelly, he sang it while beating a man and raping his wife.

Indeed, the very title "A Clockwork Orange" is bristling with irony.

George walton

December 2, 2008 10:07 PM

jet said:

The Ewwww magazine interviewer compared Harris to Johnny Cash. Yeah, right.  Even if you don't like Cash's voice, Harris can hardly get a word out between breaths.  Cash never had any problem getting the words out.

How about a clip from the rebel himself:

http://tinyurl.com/cashquentin

Cash=Harris?  Ha.

December 3, 2008 2:10 AM

rjhutzler said:

First I just want to say that you regular responders on this site all entertain and inform me to no end. (Well, almost all of you inform me, with some notable exceptions.) Christopher Orr, I am a fan of your work, your review of that disaster helmed by M. Night Shuckandjive last summer taking the cake for the best and funnies film review I've ever read (though Anthony Lane from The New Yorker still takes the cake for best and funniest sentence in a film review I've ever read--in his review of the movie Heat, he described Jon Voight as looking he'd "just been raped by a gang of pizzas." Wow.).

But to the point: Clint is obviously trying to sound like Tom Waits here. But it ain't workin'. He should do the Bob and say to the world, "Ain't Talkin, just walkin'," and he should DEFINITELY NEVER SING AGAIN. Though I would be curious to hear him try to belt out "Tom Traubert's Blues" in that gravelly-old-man voice of his. Just imagine: "Wasted and wounded, t'ain't what the moon did, and I got what I paid for now. See you tomorrow. Hey Frank can I borrow a couple of bucks from you to go waltzing Matilda, waltzing Matilda, will you go waltzing Matilda with me?" Oh, lordy.

December 3, 2008 2:21 PM

archiveguy said:

Robert Downey Jr. sang the terrible end credits song to "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang" a few years ago, so maybe that counts as a slightly delayed trend.

December 3, 2008 4:45 PM

rgrunder said:

Better yet is the fawning EW(?) intereviewer who tells Harris it's "shocking" how much he sounds like Johnny Cash. WTF? The only thing shocking here is what a shockingly stupid comment that is.

December 3, 2008 9:50 PM

The Plank said:

The National Board of Review have their film awards out today, and they evidently really, really like

December 5, 2008 11:32 AM

ericad said:

rfiore--you ain't kidding about Paint Your Wagon.  I saw that as part of an 8th grade class in American History (US public school education at its finest) and I was scarred for life after hearing Eastwood sing.  I can't wait to get out of work to go home and here this new one...

December 11, 2008 1:27 PM