4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Any Which Way is a "Right Turn, Clyde!", 1 June 2008
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"Right turn, Clyde!" and the orangutan's fist shoots out the
passenger window, impacting anyone dumb enough to have their face
there. It's just one of many running gags in this inexplicable, fuzzy
film.
Any Which Way You Can (sequel to Every Which Way But Loose) opens with
an illegal street fight, pitting bareknuckle street machine Philo
Beddoe (Clint Eastwood) now a local legend against a Marine-beating
bent cop, cheered on by a rowdy mix of truckers, crooked cops and busty
chickie babes.
While Philo ogles some jiggling boob, the cop catches him unawares.
Before he rises from the sand, Philo gives his opponent a menacing look
that tilted head with one eye slightly squinting
All I know in this
world is: you don't wanna be on the receiving end of the Clint Glare.
Ever. In short measure, the cop goes down. Meanwhile, Philo's
orangutan, Clyde, has crapped in one of the squad cars
Any Which Way
You Can, written by Stanford Sherman and directed by stuntman
extraordinaire, Buddy Van Horn, is one of those rare movies that takes
everything good about its predecessor and mashes it up in a big bowl of
wrong that tastes just right.
One of the reasons this movie works is the palpable camaraderie on set
even between Clint and his "enemies." They've all worked with him
before, in a cavalcade of past Clint classics: John Quade (in High
Plains Drifter) along with his Black Widow gang of Clint regulars, Dan
Vadis (Bronco Billy), William O'Connell (Josey Wales), Bill McKinney
(The Gauntlet); underworld bookie Beekman is Harry Guardino (last seen
chewing out Dirty Harry); there's the team from Every Which Way, Ruth
Gordon once again steaming the screen as trash-talking Ma, Geoffrey
Lewis as ever-faithful Orville, Sondra Locke still skeletal and
untalented as Philo's girl, Lynn Halsey-Taylor; (the luminous Beverly
D'Angelo was sorely missed in this sequel), and then there was Clyde
the orang utan, always in the background, yet somehow in the furry
foreground whenever a punch or a fart was needed to punctuate the
action.
Philo is still trying to make ends meet in Anytown San Fernando Valley
by rebuilding engines and bareknuckle boxing. A $10,000 underworld
match comes his way, against a man-mountain renowned for maiming and
killing his opponents, Jack Wilson (William Smith). Philo and Wilson
meet unofficially in a what else? barroom brawl, eventually
befriending each other enough to cancel their bout and anger all the
underworld figures who organized the betting stakes. They end up
fighting unofficially, the fight growing in intensity and public
attention until the whole betting populace of the small town is
cheering them on, all bets on.
With both competitors pushing 50, we wonder how this plot could even be
plausible, yet through a blend of laconic humor and outlandishness, Any
Which Way makes it believable, with a wham-bam-thank-you-ham third act
that makes you want to do 50 pushups and sit-ups a day, just to look
half as good as these veteran, iron-thewed warriors when you're their
age.
There's nothing deep here; crack a beer, strip down to your wife-beater
and just enjoy it. Every which way you look at it, Any Which Way is a
Right Turn, Clyde.
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