What are the best Clint Eastwood movies? A true legend of Hollywood, Eastwood has been a household name and known for quality filmmaking since the ’70s. He’s one of those actors that your parents love, kids stare at in awe when watching his classics, and whose name will stick around forever.
Rightly so. Clint Eastwood has made a good picture or two. Through the decades, he has starred in some of the best Westerns, best thriller movies, and best war movies ever made. So much so, narrowing down the cream of the crop is no easy task; Eastwood has got over 50 acting credits to his name.
Alas, we’re not ones to shy away from a challenging hot take. We’ve been through his filmography to find projects that are purely unmissable. These are the best Clint Eastwood movies.
The best Clint Eastwood movies:
- The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
- Dirty Harry
- The Beguiled
- Gran Torino
- Flags of Our Fathers/Letters From Iwo Jima
- Where Eagles Dare
- Unforgiven
- Million Dollar Baby
- Escape from Alcatraz
- The Mule
1. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1966)
It’s timeless: Ennio Morricone’s score, Tonino Delli Colli’s cinematography, and Sergio Leone’s close-ups juxtaposed against the sun beating down on the desert. Three men stand facing each other for the bounty. Only one will get it, in one of the greatest climaxes of all time in one of the best movies of all time.
In the culmination of the Dollars Trilogy, Eastwood’s Man With No Name becomes embroiled in the search for enough gold to disappear forever. The crafty Angel Eyes and the vengeful Tuco Benedicto are his competition, and their race is masterfully crafted by Leone.
Riveting gunfights, gorgeous establishing shots, and tension you could serve for dessert, this is truly just the best of the best. Check out our The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly review for more.
2. Dirty Harry (1971)
Nothing against Liam Neeson, but his speech in Taken pales in comparison to the hard-boiled monologue Eastwood delivers within the first half-hour of Dirty Harry. Unorthodox, to say the least, Inspector Harry Callahan is the archetype for members of the police force that don’t play by the rules, but get results nonetheless.
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Harry finds himself facing someone just as uncouth, unpredictable, and ruthless: the sniping serial killer Scorpio. Every time they get close to each other it’s nail-biting. Director Don Siegel places the two in an empty stadium as if goading us for enjoying the spectacle. The contempt and frustration that emanates from Eastwood’s tense performance make it nigh impossible to look away.
3. The Beguiled (1971)
Feeling boxed in by all the action movies, in 1971 Eastwood decided to take the male lead in an adaptation of The Beguiled, wherein Union soldier John McBurney finds himself in the care of a Mississippi seminary. Proving he’s considerably more than cigars, sweat, and shoot-outs, he spends much of the picture doing odd jobs while being ogled by Geraldine Page, Elizabeth Hartman, and Jo Ann Harris.
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The film itself, another Siegel collaboration, is a pure southern gothic romance, dark and sultry in its temptations with deep, longing stares. Eastwood brings an acid Western quality, as someone who’s done with war and would prefer to live at a different speed. There’s a slight comfort in his eyes at the end, a hint of relief at not having to deliver another blaze of glory.
4. Gran Torino (2008)
On its face, Gran Torino seems an exercise in pure narcissism: Eastwood directing himself as a curmudgeonly old man who becomes the hero regardless of his bigotry. And it is! But there’s a remarkably sentimental edge to the story too, with Eastwood reflecting on how he’s perceived, and what he wants to leave behind.
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Eastwood plays Walt Kowalski, an elderly army veteran watching his neighborhood descend into gang violence. He bonds with Thao Vang Lor, a young Chinese man who tried to steal his car.
Through the friendship, Walt starts to see hope in the next generation, ultimately choosing to leave them with more positive memories than negative ones. Your mileage on the redemption may vary, but there’s no denying Eastwood’s candor.
5. Flags of our Fathers/Letters From Iwo Jima (2006)
Depicting The Battle of Iwo Jima from both the United States and Japan’s perspectives, Eastwood’s sister films have their cake and eat it too by revelling in patriotic salute, and the damage incurred by all sides. The duality isn’t finely balanced – Flags of our Fathers is worse for its jingoism – but the overall tapestry is something to behold.
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First, you have the Americans and the squad that fought in Iwo Jima and managed to raise the stars and stripes. Their half has its moments amid all the profane national pride, but it’s the second part that really shines. A more nuanced screenplay, courtesy of Iris Yamashita, and the hiring of predominantly Japanese actors – Ken Watanabe among them – give Letters From Iwo Jima an authenticity rarely seen from Hollywood on the subject.
6. Where Eagles Dare (1968)
Eastwood opposite Richard Burton in a WWII romp about a pair of American soldiers who’ll stop at nothing to complete their mission behind enemy lines. It’s quintessential filmmaking, workmanlike in structure, pacing, and tone. From the moment Ron Goodwin’s score comes striding in, you know what you’re going to get.
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Part of what sets Where Eagles Dare apart from many of its peers is the pairing of Eastwood and Burton. The reserved Britishness of Burton makes clear just how magnetic Eastwood was and is. They’re a formidable force on camera – enough to inspire songs from The Misfits and Iron Maiden, anyway.
7. Unforgiven (1992)
Not only one of Eastwood’s best movies but one of Gene Hackman‘s and Morgan Freeman‘s too. Directed by Eastwood, Unforgiven is another treatise on his own career, wherein he examines the Western through a tale of murder and desperation. Money is at the center, as it so often tends to be, but nobody makes it off with this bounty in one piece.
Eastwood himself is William Munny, a retired gunslinger who needs one last job to set up his kids. He rides with Ned Logan, and they face sheriff ‘Little’ Bill Daggett, a heavy-handed lawmaker. To William and Ned, Bill is the enemy, but to Bill, they are hired guns that always leave bloodshed behind.
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Violence is as violence does, and in showing the American West in such morally grey tones, Eastwood makes clear he should be nobody’s hero – even with such an incredible career behind him.
8. Million Dollar Baby (2004)
Starring Hillary Swank as a boxer (although it was almost Sandra Bullock) Eastwood reluctantly trains. It won Best Picture at the Oscars, changed Swank’s career trajectory, and is a mighty feather in Eastwood’s cap.
Also starring Morgan Freeman, it’s a tense tale of work ethic, and determination, and one of the best sports movies to date.
9. Escape from Alcatraz (1979)
A big moment in film pop culture, Escape from Alcatraz is a prison break story that proceeded the likes of The Shawshank Redemption. It’s based on real-life events that took place on Alcatraz Island.
We could tell you how good it is, but here’s respected critic Roger Ebert on the film instead: “For almost all of its length, Escape from Alcatraz is a taut and toughly wrought portrait of life in a prison. It is also a masterful piece of storytelling, in which the characters say little and the camera explains the action.” You probably trust him a little more than us, we get it.
10. The Mule (2018)
This crime/drama is a fine example of how Eastwood has chugged along as a director, not letting age slow him down. The Mule follows 90-year-old horticulturist Earl Stone, who is alone and facing foreclosure on his business. When he takes a job as a drug courier for a Mexican cartel, his success leads to easy money and a bigger shipment which draws the attention of the DEA.
Stoic, highly strung, and confidently directed, this is one of the better films from the latter stages of the actor’s career behind the camera.
And that’s your lot, punk! For more lists of actors’ top hits, check out the best Matt Damon movies, the best Ben Affleck movies, or the best Arnold Schwarzenegger movies. We’ve also got a list of all the new movies coming soon. Also, if you love Clint, check out this story about his next movie or how Clint Eastwood once refused to leave a movie set despite there being a fire.