Customer Reviews


72 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (24)
3 star:
 (15)
2 star:
 (12)
1 star:
 (13)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 

The most helpful favourable review
The most helpful critical review


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A thriller acted, directed and produced by my favorite actor!
Tonight was Clint Eastwood night in the Dravis household...again. Just can't get enough of that guy!

In Blood Work, Eastwood plays a retired, aging FBI profiler who recently had a heart transplant. Although not completely well, he's tough, gruff and smart as a whip. When his heart donor's grieving sister (Wanda De Jesus) asks him to find her dead sibling's...
Published on July 22 2010 by Betty L. Dravis

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Read the book...
I give kudos to Mr. Eastwood for seeing a great book in the novel - Michael Connelly is a gifted writer - and developing a movie, however, the movie does not have the suspense of the book.

As a devout reader of crime mystery, I had to have this movie for my library because it was a Michael Connelly novel - no other reason. It was distressing not to at least have an...

Published on April 12 2004


‹ Previous | 1 28| Next ›
Most Helpful First | Newest First

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A very decent Eastwood Thriller, Oct 24 2010
By 
Robert Badgley (St Thomas,Ontario,Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blood Work (DVD)
This Aug/2002 release of Clint Eastwood's thriller Bloodwork,has now been re-released on DVD by Warner's.If you haven't noticed,they have been steadily re-releasing most of his works onto DVD,either singly and/or sets,in a remastered form and boy do they look good.This movie is no exception and as always this enhances the viewing experience tremendously.
The story line in this well cast movie is about one Lt.McCaleb,retired FBI profiler.One night he is on scene investigating a homicide when he spots the suspect.He chases him but has a heart attack while trying to climb a chain link fence.The hooded suspect stops and starts back towards him which enables McCaleb to get a few shots off at him,and he wounds the fleeing suspect.McCaleb goes out and we find that he is not only still alive but has received a heart transplant from a young lady who was fatally shot in a robbery around this same time.He also is now retired and living on a boat,and his neighbour is a jolly sort of guy by the name of Jasper Noone(Jeff Daniels),who lives off his dad's stipends.
One day NcCaleb is visited by a woman by the name of Graciella Rivers(Wanda De Jesus).It seems McCaleb was the recipient of his dead sisters heart and she reasons he owes it to her sister to find her killer.Reluctantly he agrees but as his inquiries and investigation widen his heart is starting to act for the worse under the strain.His doctor Dr Fox(Angelica Huston)continually warns him against such folly but McCaleb determinedly soldiers on.The trail has many branches and some of them lead to seemingly dead ends but there is a grisly connection to all of them.Witnesses even get killed and when he goes to the location of one of the murders at an ATM machine,the murderer himself unknowingly(to McCaleb)stands right behind him.As McCaleb's heart saps his energy he enlists the help of Jaspar,whom he calls "Buddy",to drive him around to various locales.A Russian suspect who he interrogates at his work place roughs up the weakened McCaleb and escapes,only to turn up dead later.He visits the wife of the ATM victim and discovers the killer has been taking souvenirs.Not only that but close studying of security tapes of the crime scenes reveals the killer is sending McCaleb verbal messages.
Graciella and her sisters son visit McCaleb one evening on his boat.The son asks McCaleb what the numbers mean that were found at the original crime scene.He says he could never figure them out and the boy replies that there is no number one.McCaleb and the Graciella visit the hospital next day and talk to his doctor.Someone he believes has hacked into the blood donor files and that the motive for the killings was their blood types not money.Sure enough this turns out to be the case as the main victims names/blood types are all on the list.The revelation finally hits McCaleb and he pays a visit to his boat pal Buddy.It was his last name that finally gave him the answer....no(one),as in no"one" in the numbers left at the original crime scene.Buddy is the killer and admits it at gun point.He has kidnapped Graciella and her sisters son and when he attempts to leave McCaleb wounds him in the arm.He forces Noone to take him to their location;on a boat due for demolition run aground in the harbour.Noone temporarily escapes and when McCaleb finds and frees Graciella and her sisters son,he tells them to pull his boat back from the one they're on until they get his signal.However the killer has already hidden aboard the boat and when he reveals himself she deliberately rams the boat into the derelict boat and Noone goes flying off onto its deck.Lying there he taunts McCaleb telling him he needs him and other lies.One shot and he lands on shallow water on the boat.Defiantly he raises his head out of the water but Graciella is there to push it back down.
A taut thriller with a totally surprising twist to its ending,this is a thoroughly enjoyable entry in the Eastwood canon and proves,as if he needed to prove anything,what a great talent he is.I can say with some satisfaction that while I was never a fan of his spaghetti westerns,I latched onto his works in the late 60s and early 70s.I could see the talent on the rise then and knew great things would happen with Eastwood.And while no one ever has a perfect record,Eastwood has come as close as any to accomplishing that in a stellar acting and directing career;while making tons of coin at the box office for Warner Brothers along the way.His is truly a Hollywood success story where Eastwood has admirably done it..."his way",and I'm am grateful to have been along for the ride all these years and am still amazed at his on going output.A true talent and original.Thank you Mr.Eastwood.
This newly remastered edition gives us a clear and crisp picture in its' original a/r.Extras include a featurette on the production end of things,a conversation with Eastwood,De Jesus and Paul Rodriguez and the trailer.
All in all a highly enjoyable and recommended Eastwood picture guaranteed to satisfy all the way to the end.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A thriller acted, directed and produced by my favorite actor!, July 22 2010
By 
Betty L. Dravis "BETTY DRAVIS, author/reviewer" (Silicon Valley, CA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blood Work (DVD)
Tonight was Clint Eastwood night in the Dravis household...again. Just can't get enough of that guy!

In Blood Work, Eastwood plays a retired, aging FBI profiler who recently had a heart transplant. Although not completely well, he's tough, gruff and smart as a whip. When his heart donor's grieving sister (Wanda De Jesus) asks him to find her dead sibling's killer, he feels obligated to do it even if it puts his health at risk.

This is a gritty, no-nonsense role and Eastwood is superb as Terry McCaleb. Jeff Daniels, who plays Eastwood's neighbor and younger sidekick, is well cast, also. Brian Helgeland, "L.A. Confidential" Oscar-winner, wrote a sharp, sensible script that is pure Eastwood all the way. "Blood Work" is adapted from a novel by Michael Connelly.

Some people may chuckle at a brief love scene between Eastwood and De Jesus, but I think he will always be a sensual man, so had no problems with that. It was a realistic portrayal... But I did giggle when his real-life wife, Dina Ruiz, popped up in a scene with microphone in hand, trying to get a quote from Eastwood's character, Terry McCaleb. That was a cameo role at its best. :-)

Eastwood is my favorite all-time actor, no matter what his age. The man has stamina and great box-office appeal at 72 or 22!

Blood Work is an exciting thriller with edge-of-your-seat pacing, great action and an excellent cast. I highly recommend it.

Reviewed by Betty Dravis, July 22, 2010
Author of "Dream Reachers" (with Chase Von) and other books
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4.0 out of 5 stars Eastwood goes into difficult territorry in interesting caper, Sep 18 2012
By 
Anthony Marinelli "marilread" (toronto on canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
The recent political climate in which this film is set against, is Eastwood's interest in victims from a conservative standpoint. It should be stated, and he stated this on tv today, he approaches the subject not from the standpoint of a party hack or representing a party, but from the standpoint of the artist, in response to the community where he lives to search out a way so that in the future victimization is lessenned. Romney has taken up this theme in the election, who as a religious person has philosophical and human(e) interest for him...in the bonus feature a costar of spanish ethnic background talks of Eastwood the 'man of elysian fields' the heavely realm which occupies the actor's imagination and prompts and stirs him in his work. He's a man with a spanish heart. Recall his film Two Mules for Sister Sara with Shirley Maclaine. He talks of the maturity of people as a way to spring forward and maturity is apparent in his view of people. The film is not thought to be one of his better roles, and the private eye has him going against type, in a genre mastered by James Garner, who can really replace him, and such icons of the past as Robert Mitchum and Humphrey Bogart. So this film presents Eastwood with a challenge. Plus, as a classic actor whoose movies are watched like no other american, he knows he will be under the microscope. He mentions in the bonus feature he recently made Space Cowboys with some old stars, perhaps the thought that this film really has a private eye..and he in no way tries to match or replicate these old actors way of doing the role, and I believe that's why the audience may feel its not him at his best, I disagree with that, he's just in different terrain...and although Space Cowboys was a differnet area in which he stands out in a good film...here he's being compared to the genre...with great actors. We are in an area of some controversey, FBI profiling, heart transplant and a vctim or two, and an ethnic discussion of a Russian, a hardworking person working for little money, who robs a Chinese shopkeeper. Also along is Jeff Daniels in an intersting role whom Eastwood in Shakespearean language calls an excellent actor excelling in 'bufoonery.' The chief we are told has a problem,he is seen to be a voyeur which may effect his profiling skills...the change from old policing to more modern investigative techniques...as in other films the Eastwood character stresses doing a good job, professionalism. As in the other films in rescuing the victim, he is the 'lone ranger' sans Tonto. he realizes he is against a hateful-evil- thing...this is very old fashioned language, and is focused on his dramatization of stories on victims, abandondoning the social sciences and describing things in terms of evil...why are some good and bad. There are also references to Valentine's Day..a few references and love...and scenes of carnage and slaughter and gory bloodied victims...our broken society in ways if only love was stronger than death as the disgusting images reappear and at films end the perpetrator is extinguished...if that is really aresolution? But that's our world..the film talks of the integrity of crime investigations..or its converse...in relation to the plight of and rescue of victims,,,and Eastwood's character has a new physical heart...and is a renaissance of sorts figure...a new heart to make a new world...but just him alone...there are many spanish costars and a mexico angle in film and he takes picture with these stars in bonus feature...Eastwood is really in a territorry mastered by others...but he puts in a good performance well in line thematically with his other films...
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4.0 out of 5 stars compelling and engaging, Sep 2 2007
By 
falcon "disdressed12" (canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
sure this movie takes awhile to get going,but it does work.there's a bit of a murder(and more)mystery to solve,but unlike most formulaic movies of the genre this takes a different approach to things.i found it refreshing actually.this is really a thinking person's movie,and it's nice to have your brain engaged.it's very intelligent,with a good mix of characters.it's not predictable,even though you may think you have it figured out.it has more than one surprising revelation.if you only looking for an action packed,high suspense film,this probably isn't it.i think it's a testament to the strong writing and direction that a slower paced movie such as this succeeds as well as it does.i never found it boring once.you are always given enough to maintain a steady level of interest.and that's all that's needed you guessing and hooked.i won't say this is a masterpiece.i don't think it's that kind of movie.it's low key and character(as well as story)driven. an easy 4/5
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


1.0 out of 5 stars blood work, July 12 2004
By 
tom barford (philadelphia, pa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
this is the worst detective movie i have ever seen. in twenty minutes i solved the crime that it takes clint eastwood's character the rest of the movie to solve. the motive, the crime, etc., are completely given away by the first clue. yet the movie keeps draging on as clue after redundant clue fail to yeild any progress. it's like watching wheel of fortune and all but one letter has been revealed, yet the contestant can somehow not solve the puzzle. absolutely horrendous, please don't waste your money.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4.0 out of 5 stars Decent crime-thriller flick but awkward at times., Jun 10 2004
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
I happened to have had a fascination with the whole way that forensic investigators have used unusual evidence to track down and find who the real criminals behind crimes really are. 2002's Clint Eastwood directed "Blood Work" for the most part does succeed in being a really good and sometimes challenging movie for crime-drama thriller moviegoers.

Terry McCaleb is a former FBI agent Miami who recently retired after a minor heart attack forced him to retire from the job of police investigator until after a string of killings, he comes out of retirement and goes back on the job when the sister of a murder victim is desperate to have her sister's killer brought to justice. Terry McCaleb has had a hard life because of the frustration of letting the killer slip through his hands due to the heart ailment that he suffered just as he was about to catch him. Even more daunting is that the victims' blood matches McCaleb's and he in fact got a heart transplant from one of the murder victims but defies the health effects of his heart transplant to bring down the killer before he strikes again.

This movie is a really good thriller for the most part but the movie does have it's share of flaws like even a lot of positive reviews have emphasized. One of the is that the acting by the entire cast, while decent, does from time to time, drift off in all directions. However my favorite one was actor Paul Rodriguez. While he doesn't have a whole lot of acting time on this film, he is so funny as the hot-tempered chief who has had a long standing semi-rivalry with McCaleb. Seeing his character go ballistic all the time is so funny and to be honest, besides Clint Eastwood, Paul Rodriguez really is the shining star for me.

"Blood Work" is also marred somewhat by a slow moving storyline and it drags on in places and as a result it's sometimes hard to watch the movie without sitting still or getting bored but it does pick back up before you would fall asleep. One lovemaking scene between Gracielle Rivers(Wanda De Jesus) and McCaleb was somewhat iffy in my opinion due to their age differences and it felt cold to me.

However, The idea of the killer targeting individuals with the same blood type is in my opinion quite original and keeps this movie from being totally predictable. This is not an essential movie by any stretch of the imagination but for those who like shows like "CSI" as well as "CSI: Miami", then this film is worth a look or two. The DVD has offers no worthy extras in my opinion.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


3.0 out of 5 stars Read the book..., April 12 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood Work (Full Screen) (DVD)
I give kudos to Mr. Eastwood for seeing a great book in the novel - Michael Connelly is a gifted writer - and developing a movie, however, the movie does not have the suspense of the book.

As a devout reader of crime mystery, I had to have this movie for my library because it was a Michael Connelly novel - no other reason. It was distressing not to at least have an interview on the DVD with Mr. Connelly. The acting is mostly mediocre, with the exception of Eastwood. Buddy is miscast with Daniels, as is Graciela with DeJesus. I like the work of Daniels, and he would have been better in the cop role.

If you want a good cop movie, by another great writer, try the Onion Field.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


3.0 out of 5 stars Not all that great but far from bad., Feb 26 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
This movie is a rather average crime drama about a retired FBI agent who recieved a heart transplant from a murder victim and is now on the case of solving the murder and finding who is behind the heinous crime that took place at a convenience store.

He gets out of retirement after being asked by the sister of the murder victim to help her track down the one responsible for the crime. This serial killer targets individuals who have blood types that match that of the former retiree.

This movie is good to a degree but the whole thing is just watered down by a very predictable outcome and does nothing to make it very memorable. The acting has seen better days as well.

Not a bad film but this could really have been a lot better in my honest opinion.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4.0 out of 5 stars Okay, how long will it take you to figure this one out?, Feb 7 2004
By 
Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (HALL OF FAME)   
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
I would expect a wide range of responses to "Blood Work," with the key factor being at what point in the proceedings you went from being behind in figuring out what was going on to getting way ahead of the game. Once again Clint Eastwood is working in front and behind the camera, playing Terry McCaleb, who is an F.B.I. Profiler working on the case of the Code Killer. Literally on the heels of the serial killer, McCaleb suffers a massive heart attack, but still manages to put a bullet in the fleeing suspect. We then jump ahead two years to a point where McCaleb is retired and ending his second month with a new heart. Then Graciella Rivers (Wanda De Jesús) shows up at boat and says she wants him to investigate the murder of her sister. McCaleb declines, since he is retired from the force and recovering from a heart transplant, but Graciella trumps his objections by telling him that it is her sister's heart that is now beating in his chest. McCaleb feels obligated to investigate, even though it means stepping on the toes of the local cops (Paul Rodriguez and Dyaln Walsh as the unfriendly cops and Jaye Winston as the helpful one).

McCaleb is not well; we know this because everybody constantly tells him and his doctor (Anjelica Huston) has a fit every time he even spends time thinking hard. But McCaleb has a debt to repay, and as he investigates the murder he, of course, uncovers things that none of the other cops are picking up on. I know exactly what I want to say about this type of thriller, but even announcing in general terms what is happening here would give the game away. I caught on about five minutes before McCaleb did and while I liked the revelation of what exactly had been done and why, I have to admit the film is all downhill by that point. From there on "Blood Work" is less about McCaleb using his brains and more being able to do what needs to be done to bring down the villain before he needs another heart transplant.

Clint Eastwood is in his seventies now and is deservedly up for an Oscar nomination for his work as director on "Mystic River." I have much less of a sense of Eastwood the director on this 2002 film, but mainly because Eastwood the actor is more noticeable. When you look back on the films in which Eastwood has acted in the past few years ("Space Cowboys," "True Crime," "Absolute Power") it becomes clear that that he is cognizant of his age and consciously making films suitable to a man his age. That is not meant as a slight, because most actors his age are not still running around at all, let alone as leading men in theatrical films.

The only persons that come to mind from my lifetime would be Spencer Tracy, who was 67 when he died after making "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," and John Wayne, whose last film, "The Shootist," was really the only one that showed him as a figure in decline before his death at the age of 72. You would think the better comparison would be to Wayne, given Eastwood's history with the western, but it was Tracy who had four Oscar nominated performances in his last decade, playing older men (add "The Old Man and the Sea," "Inherit the Wind" and "Judgment at Nuremberg" to the aforementioned film). Eastwood has only received one acting nomination, for "Unforgiven," yet he is carving out a body of work as an older leading man. Paul Newman has been doing mostly supporting roles since he finally won his long-overdue Oscar. Only Clint Eastwood has really been making a lot of movies, a list to which "Blood Work" gets added, about an old guy trying to hang on to his Alpha-male role.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2.0 out of 5 stars Piles on the clichés, Feb 2 2004
By 
Hinkle Goldfarb (R.R. 1 Highway 162, Butte City, California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood Work (Widescreen) (DVD)
The innocent black man mistakenly convicted of murder; the last-minute attempt for a reprieve. Been there; done that. All that was needed was a close-up of the telephone at the gas chamber and a close shot of the warden sweating before throwing the switch. Oh wait, we got those too.

If you want a nice antidote to the cliché, may I recommend ï¿Just Cause,ï¿ which, although filled with plenty of clichés of its own (including a hysterical flickering-lights-while-the-electric-chair-is-turned-on scene) ends up with an unexpected bad guy and a few innocent bodies to boot.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


‹ Previous | 1 28| Next ›
Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Blood Work (Widescreen)
Blood Work (Widescreen) by Clint Eastwood (DVD - 2002)
CDN$ 9.93
In Stock
Add to cart Add to wishlist
Only search this product's reviews