Clint Eastwood movies available on 4K Blu-ray, ranked by transfer quality.
dir. Sergio Leone
S-Tier Arrow Video 4K. Arrow and Kino Lorber both released versions of the Dollars trilogy on 4K, and the Arrow discs are the ones to get. The Italian 4Kult versions also exist but opinions are mixed on how they compare.
Arrow Video · 4K + Blu-ray
S-Tier Arrow Video 4K. Leone's sequel. Arrow's Dollars trilogy 4Ks are the versions to get.
dir. Clint Eastwood
S-Tier Kino Lorber 4K. Clint Eastwood's revisionist western. The desert photography looks good with the HDR grade.
Kino Lorber · 4K + Blu-ray
Leone's epic lives in the top tier of reference discs alongside Dune and Lawrence of Arabia. The transfer does justice to the widescreen desert photography and the Morricone score hits different in lossless.
Warner S-Tier 4K. The best-looking Eastwood western on disc and the one people agree earned its S-Tier. A reliable haul post staple.
Warner Bros. · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Don Siegel
A-Tier Warner Bros. 4K. Clint Eastwood's first Dirty Harry. The San Francisco photography looks good on a modern display.
dir. Wolfgang Petersen
Veteran Secret Service agent Frank Horrigan is a man haunted by his failure to save President Kennedy while serving protection detail in Dallas. Thirty years later, a man calling himself "Booth" threatens the life of the current President, forcing Horrigan to come back to protection detail to confront the ghosts from his past.
A-Tier Warner Bros. 4K. Eastwood's western, released alongside Dirty Harry and The Outlaw Josey Wales in a 4K wave. The scenery is going to benefit from the upgrade. Steelbook art across all three was praised, and Amazon had them at $27.99 USD before raising the price.
Warner A-Tier 4K. Available individually or in the Eastwood set with Dirty Harry and Pale Rider. The steelbook art got mixed reactions and most collectors are grabbing the individual editions.
dir. Michael Cimino
Capelight A-Tier 4K. Eastwood and Bridges in a Cimino road movie that got lost in the shuffle of 70s Americana. The Montana location photography is the visual draw, and the film is a hidden gem for anyone who likes the era.
Capelight Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
Kino Lorber B-Tier 4K, part of their Eastwood run with Two Mules for Sister Sara and Play Misty for Me. The alpine mountain photography does most of the work for a film that was middling even in 1975.
Earl Stone, a man in his eighties, is broke, alone, and facing foreclosure of his business when he is offered a job that simply requires him to drive. Easy enough, but, unbeknownst to Earl, he's just signed on as a drug courier for a Mexican cartel. He does so well that his cargo increases exponentially, and Earl hit the radar of hard-charging DEA agent Colin Bates.
C-Tier Kino Lorber 4K. Eastwood at Alcatraz. Kino got this from Paramount's catalog.
Kino Lorber