the best Westerns ever made. Spanning nearly 7 decades, there is something in his filmography that just about anyone can love, making him an incredibly accessible actor to get into.

Although he is primarily known for his Westerns, Clint Eastwood had roles in a variety of different genres, bringing the same gravitas and power that he has always had to each character he plays. While not every role of his was a hit, there were more that were. Clint Eastwood has played some of the coolest characters around, with quite a few being among the most iconic ever put to film.

10 Preacher

Pale Rider (1985)

Pale Rider (1985)

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Pale Rider
Release Date
June 28, 1985
Runtime
115 minutes
Director
Clint Eastwood

WHERE TO WATCH

This Western film revolves around a mysterious preacher who arrives in a struggling mining camp, where the residents are pitted against a greedy mining company encroaching on their land. With his enigmatic past and formidable skills, the preacher helps the miners defend their rights, invoking themes of redemption and conflict.

Writers
Michael Butler, Dennis Shryack
Main Genre
Western
Budget
$6.9 million
Studio(s)
Malpaso Productions, Warner Bros.
Distributor(s)
Warner Bros.

Clint Eastwood has played some incredible characters over the years, and one of his best is The Preacher in the 1985 film, Pale Rider. Like most Clint Eastwood Western roles throughout his career, The Preacher is a mysterious figure who arrives at a small mining village and protects them from a greedy mining company. The stoicism on display by Eastwood in Pale Rider is incredible, showing just how well he understands the character and the genre.

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What really stands out about The Preacher are his supernatural qualities, raising the question of whether he was actually a flesh and blood human or something more. Clint Eastwood himself believes that The Preacher is a ghost, and while there is not an explicit answer within the film itself, it's nice to see that Eastwood wants to lean into that idea, given it makes the character even more mysterious.

9 Robert Kincaid

The Bridges of Madison County (1995)

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The Bridges of Madison County
Release Date
June 2, 1995
Runtime
135 Minutes
Director
Clint Eastwood

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The Bridges of Madison County is a romantic drama directed by Clint Eastwood, who also stars alongside Meryl Streep. The film tells the story of sca Johnson, a lonely Iowa housewife, who has a life-changing, four-day romance with Robert Kincaid, a traveling photographer visiting to photograph the county's historic bridges. Set in 1965, the film explores themes of love, loss, and the roads not taken, as sca must choose between her family commitments and her heart's desire.

Writers
Richard LaGravenese, Robert James Waller
Main Genre
Drama

While Clint Eastwood is a phenomenal actor, he stayed in his lane for most of his career, with a steady offering of Westerns and action films with some dramas thrown in for good measure. Still, when he tries his hand at more romantic films, they can be great too. Perhaps his best is The Bridges of Madison County, where he plays Robert Kincaid, a National Geographic journalist who begins a short love affair with a married woman played by Meryl Streep.

It's against type compared to most of Eastwood's best roles, but that is also what makes it so good, showing how capable he is as an actor with any type of material.

What makes Robert Kincaid such a great character is how warm and understanding he is toward Streep's sca and the two characters' decision to engage in a romance that is destined to fail is heartbreakingly tragic. It's against type compared to most of Eastwood's best roles, but that is also what makes it so good, showing how capable he is as an actor with any type of material.

8 Walt Kowalski

Gran Torino (2008)

Gran Torino Movie Poster

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Gran Torino
10/10
Release Date
December 12, 2008
Runtime
116 Minutes
Director
Clint Eastwood

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Gran Torino stars Clint Eastwood as Walt Kowalski, a Korean War veteran and retired auto worker who forms an unexpected bond with his Hmong neighbors. Set in a Detroit neighborhood, the film explores themes of racial tension, cultural exchange, and redemption. Directed by Eastwood, it delves into the complexities of aging, prejudice, and the search for connection in a changing world.

Writers
Dave Johannson, Nick Schenk
Main Genre
Drama
Budget
$22-33 Million
Studio(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, Double Nickel Entertainment, Malpaso Productions
Distributor(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures

Sitting firmly as a late-career drama for Clint Eastwood, Gran Torino is a compelling look at racism, class, and the belief in an America that can contain a multitude of cultures. Channeling the same type of expression as some of his most iconic characters, Eastwood's Walt Kowalski is a hard-edged Korean War veteran who goes on to befriend his young, Hmong neighbor, whose friendship is the beating heart of the entire film.

There is a certain likability to Walt Kowalski despite the obvious flaws of his character. Underneath that hardened exterior, Eastwood is able to show some real warmth to the character. This is especially true with his interactions with the other main characters in the film, particularly with Bee Vang and Ahney Her's characters. By the end of the film, Walt Kowalski is a much more complex character than initially thought, and his final act is tragically heroic in the only way his character might have known how.

7 Frank Horrigan

In the Line of Fire (1993)

In the Line of Fire (1993) - Poster - Clint Eastwood

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In the Line of Fire
Release Date
July 8, 1993
Runtime
128 Minutes
Director
Wolfgang Petersen

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

In the Line of Fire is a thriller film where a veteran Secret Service agent, Frank Horrigan, played by Clint Eastwood, is haunted by his failure to protect President John F. Kennedy in 1963. Decades later, he is assigned to investigate a mysterious threat on the life of the current US President, while a psychopathic assassin, Mitch Leary, played by John Malkovich, begins to stalk and taunt him.

Writers
Jeff Maguire
Main Genre
Action
Budget
40000000
Studio(s)
Castle Rock Entertainment, Apple / Rose, Columbia Pictures

In the Line of Fire feels like a forgotten gem of the 1990s, but it is one of the strongest Clint Eastwood performances of his entire career. Eastwood plays Secret Service agent Frank Horrigan, who failed to protect President John F. Kennedy from assassination and makes it his mission to stop another assassin from taking out the current president. It's a tense political action thriller, and Eastwood's talents as an actor are on full display.

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The way Frank Horrigan's past failures continue to haunt him is one of the strongest aspects of the character, creating a complex person whose motives are clear from the moment you meet him. He will do his job and doesn't care what happens to him to accomplish it. Striving for redemption for his failures is also something he holds close to himself in this film, and it is a joy to watch Eastwood imbue the character with his signature gravitas.

6 Gunnery Sergeant Thomas "Gunny" Highway

Heartbreak Ridge (1986)

Heartbreak Ridge (1986) - Poster

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Heartbreak Ridge
Release Date
December 5, 1986
Runtime
130 Minutes
Director
Clint Eastwood

WHERE TO WATCH

Heartbreak Ridge, directed by Clint Eastwood, follows a tough Marine gunnery sergeant who deals with conflict with his superiors and his ex-wife while leading an undisciplined recon platoon. Released in 1986, it portrays the challenges of instilling discipline and unity within a diverse group of soldiers.

Writers
Joseph Stinson, Dennis Hackin, James Carabatsos
Main Genre
War

Clint Eastwood plays Gunnery Sergeant Thomas "Gunny" Highway in the 1985 war film, Heartbreak Ridge, a U.S. Marine nearing retirement who is tasked with whipping an undisciplined platoon of soldiers into shape to lead them in the American invasion of Granada. It's an incredible film that really plays to the strengths of Clint Eastwood as an actor while allowing him to subtly dig a bit deeper.

Clint Eastwood doesn't have too many war films to his name, but the ones he does have are incredible, with Heartbreak Ridge being one of the standouts.

Highway embodies the older soldier persona well, as he is gruff, strict, and uncompromising, which fits right into Clint Eastwood's wheelhouse as an actor. There is so much more to the character, though, as he is shown to care deeply for the men he leads as well as his country. Eastwood is able to play him as tough but also vulnerable in ways that aren't typically associated with that type of character, making him one of the most impactful characters in the war film genre.

5 Josie Wales

The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976)

The Outlaw Josey Wales - Poster

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The Outlaw Josey Wales
Release Date
July 14, 1976
Runtime
135 minutes
Director
Clint Eastwood

WHERE TO WATCH

The Outlaw Josey Wales is a 1976 Western film directed by and starring Clint Eastwood. Set during and after the American Civil War, the film follows Josey Wales, a Missouri farmer seeking revenge for the murder of his family by Union soldiers. As he becomes an outlaw, Wales forms an unlikely band of outcasts and confronts various adversaries while struggling with his quest for vengeance and a chance at redemption.

Writers
Forrest Carter, Philip Kaufman, Sonia Chernus
Main Genre
Western

Set during the American Civil War, the 1976 film The Outlaw Josey Wales is a revisionist Western that centers on the titular character Josey Wales, played brilliantly by Clint Eastwood. Wales is a Missouri farmer who s the Confederate army following the death of his family. Once the war is over, and his group surrenders, Josey Wales becomes an outlaw, pursued by bounty hunters and soldiers alike.

It's hard to root for a character like Josey Wales at first, given the nature of who he fights for, but there is so much to him that seeing his progression throughout the film is fascinating to watch. Clint Eastwood channels Josey Wales' loneliness and internal conflict so well, and the way he is shaped by the people he meets along his journey allows him to grow as a complex character.

4 Frankie Dunn

Million Dollar Baby (2004)

million dollar baby poster

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Million Dollar Baby
PG-13
Drama
Sport
Release Date
December 15, 2004
Runtime
132 minutes
Director
Clint Eastwood
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Hilary Swank
  • Headshot Of Mike Colter
    Mike Colter

WHERE TO WATCH

Million Dollar Baby is an Oscar-winning sports drama directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Eastwood, Hilary Swank, and Morgan Freeman. It follows Maggie Fitzgerald, a young female boxer, as she trains under the guidance of her trainer, Frankie Dunn, and tries to make it to the top.

Writers
Paul Haggis
Budget
$30 million
Studio(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures
Distributor(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures, New Line Cinema

While Million Dollar Baby is a Hilary Swank masterclass, Clint Eastwood's Frankie Dunn is one of the best characters in his career. As a later Clint Eastwood film, Million Dollar Baby feels a lot like him reflecting on his career. Frankie Dunn is a boxing trainer who is reluctant to take on Swank's Maggie Fitzgerald for several reasons, but primarily due to her being a female boxer.

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Much like he would explore in other films like Gran Torino, Frankie Dunn is a character that is very much stuck in his ways but begins to open up and show a level of vulnerability after he builds a relationship with someone he thought he never would. The end of the movie is enough to turn anyone into a sobbing mess, and Eastwood's performance as Frankie Dunn is a massive reason for that.

3 William "Will" Munny

Unforgiven (1992)

Unforgiven Movie Poster

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Unforgiven
Release Date
August 7, 1992
Runtime
130 Mins
Director
Clint Eastwood

WHERE TO WATCH

Unforgiven follows retired gunslinger Will Munny as he is drawn back into his former life for a final mission, seeking justice with his old partner and a young outlaw called The Schofield Kid.

Writers
David Webb Peoples
Main Genre
Western

Released in 1992, Unforgiven is one of the best movies in Clint Eastwood's legendary career, and also one of the best Westerns ever made. In the film, Eastwood plays William Munny, an aging outlaw and killer who takes on one more job despite spending the past few years of his life as a farmer. Munny is the culmination of everything that Clint Eastwood did throughout his career in Westerns, making him one of Eastwood's most complex characters.

Unforgiven is a masterpiece and the last traditional Western that Eastwood would ever be in again, as he had said everything he needed to say within the genre.

Clint Eastwood leans into the moral conflict of William Munny, who wrestles with the idea of violence and his role in perpetuating it throughout his life. It's a poignant look at an aging man who wants to be better and actively chooses to be, despite every impulse he has going against that notion. Unforgiven is a masterpiece and the last traditional Western that Eastwood would ever be in again, as he had said everything he needed to say within the genre.

2 Harry Callahan

Dirty Harry (1971)

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Dirty Harry
10/10
Release Date
December 23, 1971
Runtime
102 minutes
Director
Don Siegel

WHERE TO WATCH

Clint Eastwood stars in the western Dirty Harry as a no-nonsense San Francisco cop who takes the law into his own hands in pursuit of a serial killer, Scorpio. Directed by Don Siegel and featuring a memorable score by Lalo Schifrin, the film is known for its iconic catchphrases and intense action scenes, and has influenced countless films and TV shows in the years since its release.

Writers
Harry Julian Fink, Rita M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Jo Heims
Main Genre
Crime
Budget
$4 million
Studio(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures
Distributor(s)
Warner Bros. Pictures

Harry Callahan could probably be considered Clint Eastwood's most popular role, given its prominence in pop culture and how the first film, Dirty Harry, was so successful that it resulted in four more sequels for the iconic character. Dirty Harry is probably the best movie in the franchise as well as the best portrayal of "Dirty" Harry Callahan, as the film heavily leans on its neo-noir action sensibilities to craft a tense thriller where Eastwood's titular character attempts to track down a relentless killer.

What makes Harry Callahan work so well is how morally complex he is as a character, given his position as a San Francisco Police Department Inspector who will disregard protocol to suit his needs. In fact, he could be considered an anti-hero throughout Dirty Harry, whose methods to track down the killer become increasingly controversial. Harry Callahan also has one of Clint Eastwood's most famous lines in Dirty Harry, a true masterpiece.

1 Man With No Name

The Dollars Trilogy

a fistful of dollars

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A Fistful of Dollars
Release Date
January 18, 1964
Runtime
99minutes
Director
Sergio Leone, Monte Hellman

WHERE TO WATCH

A Fistful of Dollars is a spaghetti Western film from director Sergio Leone starring Clint Eastwood. A Fistful of Dollars is notable for being Clint Eastwood's big break in Hollywood and also for being the beginning of the "Dollars Trilogy." The film was followed by For a Few Dollars More in 1965 and The Good, The Bad and the Ugly in 1966.

Writers
Ryûzô Kikushima, Akira Kurosawa, A. Bonzzoni, Víctor Andrés Catena, Sergio Leone, Jaime Comas Gil
Budget
$200,000
Studio(s)
United Artists
Distributor(s)
United Artists

Although there are a plethora of Clint Eastwood characters that have been incredible throughout his career, none can really compare to his "Man with No Name" character that he plays throughout all three films in Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy. Loosely connected between A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Eastwood's Man with No Name is the main character throughout, and although it is not exactly cut and dry if Eastwood's character is the exact same person in all three films, the character remains largely the same in of personality and demeanor.

Man With No Name's Nicknames in The Dollars Trilogy

Movie

Nickname

A Fistful of Dollars

Joe

For a Few Dollars More

Manco

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Blondie

To set each of his three performances apart, his Man with No Name actually gets a nickname in each film; Joe, Manco, and Blondie. All three iterations of the character are incredible, with that classic Clint Eastwood stoicism kicking into overdrive. A good Western typically features an incredibly cool main character, and Clint Eastwood's Man with No Name might just be his coolest.