The shooting of the thriller has been completed “Juror #2”directed by him 93-year-old Clint Eastwood. Clint Eastwood showed that he is not ready to give up just yet, after the camera captured him last Tuesday, in Georgia, for the completion of the filming of his upcoming movie “Juror No. 2”.

The 93-year-old actor and director was shooting a scene for the legal thriller starring Nicholas Hoult and Toni Collette.

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The project has been billed as the filmmaker’s “last film,” with The Hollywood Reporter describing it as an attempt to find “one last project so he can ride off into the sunset with his head held high,” though neither Clint Eastgun nor Warner Bros. have stated that they intend to retire after its completion.

Clint Eastwood had appeared on set with Hoult last June after the writers’ strike began, where his actors stopped working due to the actors’ strike as well.

The famous director was seen chatting with some of his film crew while wearing a casual black windbreaker with charcoal trousers. The ‘Million Dollar Baby’ star wore headphones over his messy white hair and sported an all-white beard.

Despite his advanced age, he appeared completely engaged as he set up a shot with his crew. He looked particularly enthralled as he watched footage from the set alongside his longtime cameraman Stephen Campanelli, who first worked with him on the 1995 romantic classic, ‘The Bridges Of Madison County’.

“Juror No. 2” marks Clint Eastwood’s 40th film (41st if you count 1984’s “Tightrope”). His previous film was the drama ‘Cry Lonesome’, in which he also starred.

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Eastwood began his acting career in the mid-1950s, with a series of small film and television roles, before becoming known for his role in the series “Rawhide”. As his career seemed to stall in television, Eastwood traveled to Italy and Spain to film three starring spaghetti westerns with Italian director Sergio Leone.

The success of the “Dollars” trilogy led to more featured westerns and thrillers back in the US, including one of his most popular, “Dirty Harry” (1971), directed by one of his mentors, Don Siegel. That same year, Eastwood made his directorial debut with the psychological thriller Play Misty For Me.