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"Go ahead, make my day" is a catchphrase from the 1983 film Sudden Impact, spoken by the character Harry Callahan, played by Clint Eastwood.The iconic line was written by John Milius, [1] whose writing contributions to the film were uncredited, but has also been attributed to Charles B. Pierce, who wrote the film's story, [2] and to Joseph Stinson, who wrote the screenplay. [3]
Harry Callahan: "Go ahead, make my day." – #6 [23] "Make My Day" is a novelty song recorded by American country music artist T. G. Sheppard featuring Clint Eastwood. [24] It was released in February 1984 as the second single from the album Slow Burn. The song reached #12 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [25]
"Make My Day" is a novelty song recorded by American country music artist T. G. Sheppard featuring Clint Eastwood. It was released in February 1984 as the second single from Sheppard's 1983 album Slow Burn, although it was not included on the album until a 1984 revised release. [1]
Magnum Force (1973) Before Hollywood got too deep into the sequel business, this follow-up to 1971’s hot-button vigilante flick, Dirty Harry, proved it was possible to go to the well more than ...
Go ahead, make my day; Clint Eastwood is an American film actor, film director, film producer, singer, composer and lyricist. He has appeared in over 60 films.
By the time the movie did go before cameras in the fall of 1991, the director and star had changed the title, but very little of what was on the page — including the final scene that Peoples ...
And in the past decade Eastwood, 38, has rightfully earned the title of tough guy, like Stallone and his own father, 94-year-old Oscar winner Clint Eastwood. Lionsgate Scott Eastwood and Sylvester ...
Callahan is portrayed by Clint Eastwood in each film. From his debut, Callahan became the template for a new kind of film cop: an antihero who does not hesitate to cross professional boundaries in pursuit of his own vision of justice, especially when the law is poorly served by an inept, incompetent bureaucracy.