Richard Donner (born April 24, 1930, New York City, New York, U.S.—died July 5, 2021) was an American film director who emerged in the 1980s as one of Hollywood’s most reliable makers of action blockbusters, most notably the Lethal Weapon films.

Early work

Donner acted in Off-Broadway productions before moving to California, where he began directing industrial films and television commercials. In the early 1960s he graduated to TV series, helming episodes of such shows as Wanted: Dead or Alive and Route 66. In 1961 he directed his first feature film, a Cold War drama called X-15, which starred one of the cinema’s least likely couples, Charles Bronson and Mary Tyler Moore. Donner then returned to television, and his credits during this time included Twilight Zone, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Gilligan’s Island, and Perry Mason.

(Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.)

In 1968 Donner helmed his second film, Salt and Pepper (1968), a lighthearted comedy featuring Sammy Davis, Jr., and Peter Lawford as British club owners in trouble with the mob; the movie was a minor hit. After reteaming with Bronson for the comedy Lola (1970), Donner again focused on TV. In addition to working on various shows, he also began directing made-for-television films, including Sarah T.—Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic (1975), which starred Linda Blair in the title role.

In 1976 Donner had his big-screen breakthrough with The Omen, a violent supernatural thriller that starred Gregory Peck as an American diplomat whose son, Damien—switched at birth upon the suggestion of a priest—turns out to be the Antichrist. It was a critical and commercial success, and Donner’s focus shifted to films. For his next project, he accepted the high-profile assignment of directing Superman (1978), which starred Christopher Reeve in the title role, Margot Kidder as Lois Lane, and Gene Hackman as archvillain Lex Luthor. The action movie was a worldwide box-office hit. Donner was signed to direct the sequel (1980) and was nearing completion when he was fired because of differences with the producers. His replacement, Richard Lester, finished the movie and reshot a number of earlier scenes. In 2006 Donner was permitted to release his version, Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut.

Films of the 1980s

Donner began the 1980s with several box-office disappointments, notably the Richard PryorJackie Gleason comedy The Toy (1982) and the sword-and-sorcery fantasy Ladyhawke (1985), with Rutger Hauer, Matthew Broderick, and Michelle Pfeiffer. In 1985, however, he had another hit with the family-adventure The Goonies, based on a story by Steven Spielberg. It was a lively modern-day treasure hunt with an ethnically mixed, gender-balanced juvenile cast. Donner found even greater success with the blockbuster Lethal Weapon (1987). A spin on the mismatched-partners chestnut—Danny Glover played a by-the-book police detective with a loving family, and Mel Gibson was a widower with a suicidal bent who breaks every rule for the sheer joy of it—that reveled in its spectacular action sequences, it was one of the year’s biggest hits and started the Lethal Weapon franchise.

Donner next made Scrooged (1988), an updated version of Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol, starring Bill Murray as a television mogul badly in need of redemption. Despite an array of notable guest stars, it was not well received at the time, though it later acquired a cult following among fans of dark holiday films. Donner closed out the 1980s with Lethal Weapon 2 (1989), which added Joe Pesci and again featured Glover, Gibson, and numerous stunts and explosions.

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The 1990s and beyond

The well-intentioned Radio Flyer (1992) may have been Donner’s attempt to keep himself from being typecast as an action director, but its disturbing story about two abused boys who retreat into fantasy never struck the right tone, and neither critics nor audiences gave it a home. By contrast, his Lethal Weapon 3 (1992) became one of the year’s highest-grossing films. He reteamed with Gibson for the amiable but rather bloated Maverick (1994), which profited from the presence of James Garner, the original Bret Maverick, and Jodie Foster. Though the film needed more substance from William Goldman’s anachronistic screenplay, it still earned some $100 million.

Assassins (1995) was minor fare, presenting Sylvester Stallone as the world’s number one assassin, which makes him a target for an up-and-coming hit man (Antonio Banderas). Far better was Conspiracy Theory (1997), which featured Gibson as a New York cabbie who sees conspiracies at every turn. He enlists the help of an attorney (played by Julia Roberts) when it appears that his paranoia might be grounded in reality. Donner’s last film of the 1990s was Lethal Weapon 4 (1998). In addition to series regulars Glover and Gibson, the action thriller featured Chris Rock as a rookie detective and Jet Li as the leader of a deadly Chinese gang. Although not well received by critics, it proved popular with moviegoers.

In 2003 Donner helmed the science-fiction adventure Timeline, which was based on a Michael Crichton best seller about a time machine. He then made 16 Blocks (2006), a scaled-back crime drama featuring Bruce Willis as a burned-out detective who has to transport a witness (an effective Mos Def) a mere 16 blocks to the courthouse where he will testify. The seemingly simple task becomes complicated, however, as numerous armed and well-trained gangsters intervene. Donner was never known for working on a small scale, but 16 Blocks suggests that he might have had a knack left unexplored during his career.

Michael Barson
Quick Facts
In full:
Clinton Eastwood, Jr.
Born:
May 31, 1930, San Francisco, California, U.S. (age 95)
Awards And Honors:
Academy Award (2005)
Kennedy Center Honors (2000)
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award (1995)
Academy Award (1993)
Academy Award (2005): Directing
Academy Award (2005): Best Picture
Academy Award (1993): Directing
Academy Award (1993): Best Picture
Cecil B. DeMille Award (1988)
Golden Globe Award (2007): Best Motion Picture - Foreign Language
Golden Globe Award (2005): Best Director - Motion Picture
Golden Globe Award (1993): Best Director - Motion Picture
Golden Globe Award (1989): Best Director - Motion Picture
Golden Globe Award (1971): World Film Favorites
Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award (1995)
Married To:
Dina Eastwood (1996–2014)
Margaret Neville Johnson (1953–1984)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"White Hunter Black Heart" (1990)
"The Gauntlet" (1977)
"Highway Patrol" (1956)
"Gran Torino" (2008)
"Per un pugno di dollari" (1964)
"City Heat" (1984)
"Kelly's Heroes" (1970)
"Dirty Harry" (1971)
"Death Valley Days" (1956)
"Absolute Power" (1997)
"Two Mules for Sister Sara" (1970)
"Escape from Alcatraz" (1979)
"Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo" (1966)
"The Rookie" (1990)
"Navy Log" (1958)
"Francis in the Navy" (1955)
"Unforgiven" (1992)
"Firefox" (1982)
"Mister Ed" (1962)
"The Enforcer" (1976)
"A Perfect World" (1993)
"Bronco Billy" (1980)
"Every Which Way but Loose" (1978)
"Le streghe" (1967)
"The Outlaw Josey Wales" (1976)
"Heartbreak Ridge" (1986)
"Rawhide" (1959–1965)
"TV Reader's Digest" (1956)
"Space Cowboys" (2000)
"Honkytonk Man" (1982)
"Million Dollar Baby" (2004)
"Any Which Way You Can" (1980)
"Maverick" (1959)
"Coogan's Bluff" (1968)
"High Plains Drifter" (1973)
"West Point" (1957)
"The First Traveling Saleslady" (1956)
"Lafayette Escadrille" (1958)
"Pale Rider" (1985)
"The Mule" (2018)
"Magnum Force" (1973)
"True Crime" (1999)
"In the Line of Fire" (1993)
"Hang 'Em High" (1968)
"The Eiger Sanction" (1975)
"Tightrope" (1984)
"Joe Kidd" (1972)
"Sudden Impact" (1983)
"The Dead Pool" (1988)
"Per qualche dollaro in più" (1965)
"Trouble with the Curve" (2012)
"Blood Work" (2002)
"The Bridges of Madison County" (1995)
"The Beguiled" (1971)
"Play Misty for Me" (1971)
"Ambush at Cimarron Pass" (1958)
"Thunderbolt and Lightfoot" (1974)
"Paint Your Wagon" (1969)
"Where Eagles Dare" (1968)
"Pink Cadillac" (1989)
Movies/Tv Shows (Directed):
"High Plains Drifter" (1973)
"True Crime" (1999)
"Changeling" (2008)
"Blood Work" (2002)
"Mystic River" (2003)
"Invictus" (2009)
"Firefox" (1982)
"The Mule" (2018)
"Breezy" (1973)
"White Hunter Black Heart" (1990)
"Unforgiven" (1992)
"Sudden Impact" (1983)
"American Sniper" (2014)
"Letters from Iwo Jima" (2006)
"The Blues" (2003)
"Amazing Stories" (1985)
"Hereafter" (2010)
"Space Cowboys" (2000)
"Richard Jewell" (2019)
"Play Misty for Me" (1971)
"The Gauntlet" (1977)
"Jersey Boys" (2014)
"The Eiger Sanction" (1975)
"A Perfect World" (1993)
"The Outlaw Josey Wales" (1976)
"Absolute Power" (1997)
"Honkytonk Man" (1982)
"Flags of Our Fathers" (2006)
"Bronco Billy" (1980)
"Million Dollar Baby" (2004)
"Sully" (2016)
"J. Edgar" (2011)
"Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil" (1997)
"The Bridges of Madison County" (1995)
"Gran Torino" (2008)
"Bird" (1988)
"The Rookie" (1990)
"Pale Rider" (1985)
"Heartbreak Ridge" (1986)
"The 15:17 to Paris" (2018)
Top Questions

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News

Austrian newspaper cuts ties with writer over Clint Eastwood ‘exclusive’ June 5, 2025, 5:10 AM ET (The Guardian)
Did That Clint Eastwood Interview Happen? Yes, Kind Of. June 4, 2025, 3:26 AM ET (New York Times)
Mara Corday, Star of ‘Tarantula’ and Lots of Westerns, Dies at 95 May 25, 2025, 2:29 AM ET (The Hollywood Reporter)

Clint Eastwood (born May 31, 1930, San Francisco, California, U.S.) is an American film actor who emerged as one of the most popular Hollywood stars in the 1960s, known for his portrayal of tough individualists, first as The Man with No Name in Sergio Leone’s spaghetti western trilogy and later as such characters as Harry Callahan in the Dirty Harry series. Eastwood also found success as a director, earning Academy Awards for his work in The Unforgiven (1992) and Million Dollar Baby (2004).

(Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.)

Early life and career

During the Great Depression, Eastwood moved with his family a number of times before they finally settled in Piedmont, California, in 1940. He was drafted during the Korean War and stationed in California. Following his discharge from the army in 1953, Eastwood moved to Hollywood. A screen test with Universal in 1954 netted him a 40-week contract, but, after one renewal and a series of bit parts in such movies as Tarantula (1955) and Revenge of the Creature (1955), his option was dropped. He appeared in several TV series before he got his big break in 1959 by being cast as Rowdy Yates in the popular TV western Rawhide (1959–65).

Eastwood achieved international stardom during this same period when he played The Man with No Name—a laconic, fearless gunfighter whose stoicism masks his brutality—in three Italian westerns (popularly known as “spaghetti westerns”) directed by Sergio Leone: Per un pugno di dollari (1964; A Fistful of Dollars), Per qualche dollari in più (1965; For a Few Dollars More), and Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo (1966; The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly). In 1967 the three films played in the United States and were immediate commercial successes, establishing Eastwood as a box-office star.

For Eastwood’s first American western, Hang ’Em High (1968)—Ted Post’s expert imitation of the Leone formula, enlivened by a superior group of character actors—he formed his own production company, Malpaso. He also worked with Don Siegel on the popular police story Coogan’s Bluff (1968); it was Siegel who taught him most of what he needed to know about directing, a debt Eastwood often acknowledged. He also worked with Siegel on the western Two Mules for Sister Sara (1970), the psychological Civil War drama The Beguiled (1971), and the prison-break film Escape from Alcatraz (1979). Their best-known collaboration was Dirty Harry (1971), in which Eastwood first portrayed the ruthlessly effective neo-noir police inspector Harry Callahan. The film proved to be one of Eastwood’s most successful, spawning four sequels and establishing the no-nonsense character Dirty Harry—known for such catchphrases as “Go ahead, make my day”—as a cinema icon.

Empty movie theater and blank screen (theatre, motion pictures, cinema).
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First directorial efforts

Eastwood turned to directing in such films as the thriller Play Misty for Me (1971), the westerns High Plains Drifter (1972) and The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), and the espionage thriller The Eiger Sanction (1975), all films in which he also played leading roles. Eastwood took over the western The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976) from Philip Kaufman, who cowrote the story of a Missouri farmer driven to violence after his family has been slaughtered by renegade Union soldiers. Stylishly photographed by Bruce Surtees, with a fine performance by Chief Dan George as a Cherokee elder, this work humanized Eastwood’s mythic avenger archetype for the first time.

Eastwood went on to make The Gauntlet (1977), a kinetic but formulaic action film in which he played a police detective trying to transport a witness (Sondra Locke) to an Arizona courthouse where she can testify. The gentle good humor pervading Bronco Billy (1980) was far removed from the mayhem of his westerns and cop movies; Eastwood was deft as the proprietor of a two-bit Wild West show who gives shelter to, then falls in love with, a runaway heiress (Locke). Firefox (1982) was a high-tech Cold War story that had Eastwood as a pilot stealing a supersonic jet from the Soviets. The whimsical and sentimental Honkytonk Man (1982), set during the Great Depression, featured Eastwood as a country singer dying of tuberculosis whose dream is to make it to the Grand Ole Opry before he passes on.

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Having wandered rather far afield from his star action persona, Eastwood directed the fourth Dirty Harry film, Sudden Impact (1983), with Locke portraying a rape victim on a vengeful murder spree. He then returned to his screen roots with the neo-mythic Pale Rider (1985), a quasi-religious western. It showcased Eastwood’s iconic presence and Surtees’s gorgeous photography and was one of the few hit westerns of the 1980s.

Heartbreak Ridge (1986) was an enjoyable drama about an old-school marine sergeant (Eastwood) on the verge of retirement whose tough approach whips a group of raw recruits into shape for the invasion of Grenada. White Hunter, Black Heart (1990) was Eastwood’s most audacious project of this period of his career, an adaptation of Peter Viertel’s roman à clef about his on-location collaboration with director John Huston on The African Queen (1951). Bravely tackling the part of Huston, Eastwood embodied the great director’s rugged physical presence.

A lifelong devotee of jazz and an accomplished pianist, Eastwood also directed the well-regarded Bird (1988), a film biography of saxophonist Charlie Parker (Forest Whitaker), and produced the documentary Thelonious Monk: Straight, No Chaser (1988). Off-screen, Eastwood made national headlines in 1986 when he was elected mayor of Carmel, California; he served for two years.