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Blood Work
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Directed by Clint Eastwood
A retired detective must battle former colleagues and his own failing health in order to bring a murderer to justice in this action drama produced and directed by its star, Clint Eastwood. Terry McCaleb (Eastwood) was one of the best and most thorough detectives at the FBI's Southern California office, until a massive heart attack sidelined him from police work for good. Following a heart transplant which saved his life, McCaleb has resigned himself to living quietly on a houseboat for the rest of his days, observing a strict health regimen prescribed by his cardiologist, Dr. Bonnie Fox (Anjelica Huston). However, McCaleb is persuaded to take on one last case through the insistence of a woman named Graciela Rivers (Wanda De Jesus). Rivers's sister was murdered in cold blood by a mugger, and her heart was used for McCaleb's transplant; now, Rivers wants McCaleb to find her sister's killer. McCaleb agrees to take on the case, but he quickly discovers his weakened physical condition makes the rigors of handling an investigation far harder and more difficult than its ever been before; he also can no longer drive a car, and must persuade his oddball friend from the marina,Buddy Noone (Jeff Daniels), to ferry him around town. Before long, despite these drawbacks, McCaleb discovers evidence which suggests the murderer may be a serial who uses random street robberies as a cover, but he finds that Ronaldo Arrango (Paul Rodriguez) and John Waller (Dylan Walsh), the police detectives assigned to the case, are not especially interested in sharing the glory (or their legwork) with the former FBI point man. Blood Work was adapted from the novel by Michael Connelly; Brian Helgeland wrote the screenplay. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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WindbreakerWindbreaker BLOOD WORK
by Windbreaker in Windbreaker!
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Let's face it, you could do a lot worse than renting Blood Work. I know, I know... not much of an endorsement, but you know what? Blockbuster Online has spoiled me with all the free rentals exchanged in-store. After seeing the DVD case, I correctly guessed the outcome of the movie -- but that's not the point of Blood Work. It's the path to the finish line. Think [More]
Phantasma-gore-iaPhantasma-gore-ia Re: What's your idea of terror?
by Phantasma-gore-ia in Gorrible
"Thank you much for the clarification and the comprehension about what the post was truly about. I do now see your logic in that what's saintly and right might just be a veneer for what's deeply heinous and terrifying. Now, who Mr. Miller really may have been is beyond me, but the smiling, happy face just could be a mask for a sociopath. Isn't that how card-carrying, [More]
paulpaul Re: Mann handling Eastwood
by paul in Top 5
"I think Puhnner's question, "Will Clint Eastwood and Michael Mann be remembered as great directors?" is touching on a larger question for U.S. cinema.Both Eastwood and Mann represent a lot of filmmakers who have saturated their careers with mediocre jobs to have the financial freedom to create a few really visionary films. When you think of Ingmar Bergman or Fellini, there's a bold imprint left by their whole body of work. Great American filmmakers often have a few bold films that rise a " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
When the deconstructive Western Unforgiven brought Clint Eastwood unprecedented respect, it was tempting to hope the newly minted auteur would reserve himself for superior projects and artistic themes close to his heart. What an appropriate metaphor for his career, then, that Eastwood's latest, Blood Work, is about a transplant of that essential organ. It's as though what makes Eastwood tick has been supplanted by a foreign presence his body can't reject, leaving him content to toe the (assembly) line and glumly perpetuate his Absolute Power-True Crime school of pedestrian thrillers. It's also tempting to suggest that this aging treasure of tough guy machismo has "still got it," but Blood Work returns quite the opposite verdict. Eastwood is finally starting to look fragile and elderly -- in fact, thank goodness his character is weak following major surgery, because it provides a narrative explanation why the actor's voice is more gasp than rasp. But Blood Work is depressing in so many ways that aren't traceable to Eastwood's frailties. Tops on the list is the utter conventionality of the script, which follows the familiar path of the umpteen thrillers in which serial killers taunt celebrity FBI agents for the purpose of aggrandizing and fetishizing their crimes. Brian Helgeland has fallen far from his days as writer of L. A. Confidential if this soap opera dialogue and ham-fisted foreshadowing is all he can muster. The tone is schizophrenic, caught between the misplaced gravity of Eastwood's recent films, the ludicrous renegade posturing of his Dirty Harry days, and a cops-and-donuts style of comedy (embodied by pesky irritant Paul Rodriguez) that was never fashionable. Long before the laughable finish, the test results of this Blood Work have already come back negative. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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