The box-office success of Every Which Way But Loose (1978) all but
ensured that audiences hadn’t seen the last of Clint Eastwood playing Philo, a
trucker with an orangutan for a pet and a side career as a bare-knuckle
fighter. Whereas Every Which Way But
Loose is an awful movie that can be explained away by assuming that Eastwood
wanted a break from playing tight-lipped avengers, Any Which Way You Can is inexcusable crap. Rehashing the narrative
elements of the previous film and sprawling across an absurd 118-minute running
time, Any Which Way You Can is punishingly
stupid. The die is cast during the opening-credits scene, a dull montage of a
pickup truck driving while Eastwood and Ray Charles croon a ghastly country
song titled “Beer’s to You” on the soundtrack. Then comes the insipid
storyline. After being dumped by country singer Lynn (Sondra Locke) in the previous
film, Philo retires from fighting, but gangsters offer him $25,000 to tussle
with Jack (William Smith), a brawler with a reputation for beating his
opponents to death. Meanwhile, Philo has misadventures with his drinking buddy
Orville (Geoffrey Lewis) and Orville’s foul-mouthed mother (Ruth Gordon).
Everything unfolds predictably. Friends ask Philo not to fight, and then
criminals blackmail him into participating. At regular intervals, the movie
stops dead for musical performances (by Locke, Glen Campbell, and others), as
well as scenes of Clyde defecating in police cars and sharing a hotel room with
a frisky lady orangutan. At one point, Clyde cavorts to the accompaniment of a
song called “Orangutan Hall of Fame.” By the time Any Which Way You Can reaches its nadir—cross-dressing bikers, a
20-minute fistfight, homophobic dialogue—the idiocy has become intolerable.
Although Eastwood wasn’t done scratching his comedy itch (please give the 1989
clunker Pink Cadillac a wide berth),
at least Any Which Way You Can ended
the actor’s orangutan era.
Any Which Way You Can: LAME
At the the time,I used to call these,"Any Which Way But Good."
ReplyDeleteAs Robert DeNiro's script choices nowadays show, things could be far, far worse.
ReplyDeleteOne has to give Eastwood credit for the chutzpah to rip off the ending of "The Quiet Man" - although William Smith always beings something good to his roles.
ReplyDeleteMike C.
The Pink Cadillac comment made me LOL.
ReplyDelete"One has to give Eastwood credit for the chutzpah to rip off the ending of "The Quiet Man"
ReplyDeleteI remember my parents saying the same thing when we forced them to watch this with us as kids.
They also said "the Duke is rolling in his grave". We were watching on HBO 1981 or 82.