A Minute with: Clint Eastwood on death, afterlife

NEW YORK,  (Reuters Life!) – Clint Eastwood wrestles  with mortality in his latest directorial effort, “Hereafter,”  but the Hollywood legend is hardly sentimental about the  possibility of an afterlife at the age of 80.

“Hereafter” stars Matt Damon and weaves in spectacular  scenes of real life events, including the 2004 tsunami and the  London 2005 bombings. The script by British writer Peter Morgan  explores several characters who face questions of what is  beyond life and death.
Eastwood talked to Reuters about whether he thinks more  about death as he ages and if he believes in psychics.
Q: Why did Steven Spielberg recommend you to do this film?
A: “He always loved ‘Unforgiven.’“

Q: What about the film’s topic interested you enough to  take it on?
A: “The whole thing of near death experiences has always  been a curiosity. Because there have been so many people who  have done that — who have died for a few minutes and then all  of a sudden, resuscitated, or came back. They do report a  similarity of things, whether it’s psychologically induced or  pre-induced or whatever, I don’t know.

“But for whatever it is, people are curious about it.  Everybody is curious about an afterlife, even if they don’t  believe it, you are still curious about it. It’s an ultimate  fantasy, visiting parents or grandparents or people that have  gone before you and seeing them again.”
Q: Is it something you are thinking more about now?

A: “I know people associate that because I am 80 years old  now, but I think I would have done this script if I was 30  years old. I like the material.”
Q: In general do you think older people think about  mortality more?
A: “I don’t know, I don’t think it is anything that  somebody is rushing towards.
“I don’t think older people think about it that much, my  mother was 97. She passed away a few years back. The only thing  she ever said to me, towards the last, she said, ‘I want out of  here, I am tired.’ And I said ‘No, no, three more years. We get  the century mark.’ I figured I could coax her into more after  that, but when she finally did pass away, she couldn’t talk  because she had had a stroke. They said do you want to be  resuscitated for while, and she said ‘no.’ So, I had to grant  her that wish.

“She had no fear and I think as you get older — you  probably have more fear as a younger person than you do as an  older person. Because as an older person you have stacked up a  lot of background and time-in-grade, so to speak, so you are  probably thinking what the hell ‘I have had a good time’.
Q: Is there one particular story you are still yearning to  tell?
A: “No, I mean I just see it as it comes along. The next  picture I am doing is about J. Edgar Hoover.”
Q: Do you believe in mediums, is it possible to connect  with people who have passed away? Have you had such an  experience?
A: “I haven’t had any personal thing. The only thing I have  ever had that is sort of offbeat, that is I have watched Uri  Geller spin the keys and things like that … I have seen that  so I am a believer. It was my house key and the only way I  would be able to use it is get a hammer and beat it out back  flat again. So there are certain energy things that are outside  of the norm … But as far as people … to actually visualize  the dead, maybe they do it, maybe it’s for real, or maybe you  just guess a certain amount of things that are common to most  people.”
Q: So do you think you will live as long as your mother?

A: “Oh I don’t know, I don’t deal with fate. My grandfather  lived to be late 90s on one side and on the other side, 70s or  something. And my father died young, at 63. But he didn’t take  very good care of himself. I think it depends on what you do.  What you put into life is what you get out of it. Take good  care of yourself and do the best you can and the rest is  wherever it is.”