Clint Eastwood looks most ornery on this very 1970's colored (brown) poster for Buddy Van Horn's Any Which Way You Can |
Trucker Philo Beddoe agrees to a lucrative fist fight with Jack Wilson from the East Coast, but when the two realize that it's going to be a life-threatening ordeal, they try to get out of the arrangement. - With gangsters and rockers in pursuit!
For a film about a defecating monkey and a motorcycle gang with wigs, (among other things), Any Which Way You Can is a formidable film. It is the very lowbrow action comedy follow-up to the big hit, James Fargo's Every Which Way But Loose (1978), also about Clint Eastwood (Pale Rider (1985)) as Beddoe and his buddy Clyde the orangutan, and it is of exactly the same quality as the first film.
Any Which Way is a film with lots of funny gags and silliness, irreverence and a down-to-earth entertainment style that I don't know where's gone today. Back in 1980, bikers, truckers, an orangutan, Eastwood and plenty of jawbreakers were all you needed for a huge commercial hit.
A bit of trivia: Clyde the orangutan from the original had gotten too big and possibly dangerous to star in the sequel, and the new Clyde died two weeks after shooting the film due to a cerebral hemorrhage, which a rumor says stemmed from cruelty by its trainer.
The film is written by Stanford Sherman (The Ice Pirates (1984)) and directed by debuting Buddy Van Horn (Cadillac (1989)), previously a stunt man and second-unit director.
Related post:
Buddy Van Horn: The Dead Pool (1988) - The highly entertaining last Dirty Harry movie
Watch a short TV trailer for the film here
Cost: 15 mil. $
Box office: 70.6 mil. $ (North America alone)
=Big hit (returned more than 4.70 times its cost)
[Any Which Way You Can was released 17 December (USA) and runs 116 minutes. Shooting took place in and around May 1980 in California, including Los Angeles, asl well as in Wyoming and New York. It opened #1 to an 8 mil. $ first weekend in North America. The first weekend gross was down from the first film's 10.2 mil. $; its final North America gross down from 85.1 mil. $ but still huge. The film's foreign results are regrettably not reported online. Glen Campbell's title tune was a Top 10 on the country music charts. Roger Ebert gave the film a 2/4 star review, translating to a notch harder than this one. Van Horn returned with The Dead Pool (1988), Eastwood's final Dirty Harry movie, working as a stuntman and stunt coordinator in the 8 years between the two directing gigs. Eastwood returned in Firefox (1982). Any Which Way You Can is rotten at 20 % with no critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of Any Which Way You Can?
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