Rating: Summary: Arizona gives mighty New York a lesson in extradition Review: Director: Don Siegel Format: Color Studio: Universal Studios Video Release Date: May 23, 1995
Cast: Clint Eastwood ... Deputy Sheriff Walt Coogan Lee J. Cobb ... Det. Lt. McElroy, NYPD Susan Clark ... Julie Roth (probation officer) Tisha Sterling ... Linny Raven (Ringerman's girlfriend) Don Stroud ... James Ringerman Betty Field ... Mrs. Ellen Ringerman Tom Tully ... Sheriff McCrea (Piute County, Arizona) Melodie Johnson ... Millie (Coogan's girlfriend) James Edwards ... Sgt. Wallace (stakeout cop) Rudy Diaz ... Running Bear David Doyle ... Pushie (tavern owner) Louis Zorich ... Taxi driver Meg Myles ... Big Red Marjorie Bennett ... Mrs. Fowler (little old lady charging rape) Seymour Cassel ... Joe (young hood) John Coe ... Bellboy Skip Battyn ... Omega (customer at Pigeon-Toed Orange Peel) Albert Popwell ... Wonderful Digby (customer at Pigeon-Toed Orange Peel) Conrad Bain ... Madison Avenue man James Gavin ... Ferguson Albert Henderson ... Desk sergeant James McCallion ... Golden Hotel room clerk Syl Lamont ... Apartment manager Jess Osuna ... Prison hospital guard Jerry Summers ... Good Eyes Antonia Rey ... Mrs. Amador Marya Henriques ... Go-go dancer at Pigeon-Toed Orange Peel James Dukas ... Prison hospital doctor Larry Duran ... Zig Zag Andy Epper ... Pool player George Fargo ... Gay boy at Pigeon-Toed Orange Peel Scott Hale ... Dr. Scott Ted Jacques ... Detective James Joyce ... Man in Pigeon-toed Orange Peel Diki Lerner ... Gay boy at Pigeon-toed Orange Peel James McEachin ... Man James Oliver ... Hip typeq Robert Osterloh ... Deputy Clifford A. Pellow ... Waiter Allen Pinson ... Whippy Doug Reid ... Prison hospital guard Al Ruban ... Detective Don Siegel ... Elevator passenger Kristoffer Tabori ... Elevator passenger Clark Warren ... Plainclothesman David Brandon ... Hippie boy Kathleen O'Malley ... Woman Diana Rose ... Psychedelic paint girl Colleen Thornton ... Hippie twin Morreen Thornton ... Hippie twin Eve Brent ... Hooker Constance Davis ... Mother Arizona Deputy Sheriff Coogan (Eastwood)comes to New York City to transport a prisoner, James Ringerman (Don Stroud ) back to Arizona for a suspected murder when he runs into lack of cooperation from Det. Lt. McElroy, NYPD (Lee J. Cobb), a cynical, overworked NYPD cop used to runarounds and bureaucracy. A typical provincial New Yorker who thinks New York is the center of the universe. he continually refers to Coogan as a "cowboy", "Tex", and other diminishing names, threatening him with jail for interference, and informing him that he is "just another private citizen." It is apparent that "private citizens" get little respect in NYC from the police. Coogan takes it upon himself to give the NYPD a lesson in extradition, Arizona style. An entertaining way to spend a couple of hours. I recommend it, like almost any other Eastwood film. Joseph (Joe) Pierre
author of Handguns and Freedom...their care and maintenance and other books.
Rating: Summary: Enjoyable urban western Review: An Arizona law enforcer, Eastwood, tracks a fugitive to the urban jungle of New York and estranges detectives with his unconventional strategy and cowboy tactics. The film delivers a number of thrills and humorous moments as Eastwood, at home in his role, lets loose on all cylinders in his pursuit of the bad guys. The film, directed by Donald Siegel, is a prototype of the more brutal "Dirty Harry", which was also directed by Siegel, featuring Eastwood as an overviolent rogue cop, "Dirty" Harry Callahan, and was the inspiration for the hit TV series "McCloud", with its New York cowboy hero on horseback.
Rating: Summary: Classic Eastwood Urban Western Gets a Makeover Review: Another great Clint Eastwood movie gets the DVD release treatment, and finds Clint playing the title role in this "rural cop in the big city" action drama. This movie paved the way for the long running and succesful (though much more benign) TV series "McCloud" starring Dennis Weaver, and deals with the cultural clash between a Sheriff from Arizona, and NYPD's finest. This is a fairly straightforward story, but handled very well by the Don Siegel in the directors chair, who went on to make other Eastwood gems such as Dirty Harry a couple of years later. Fighting off the constant stereotyping by his New York brother officers, Lt Coogan (Eastwood) is a laconic fish out of water, and has to track down and return to Arizona with escaped killer Ringerman, played by Don Stroud. Red tape, and more than a little obstruction by the locals, mainly in the form of Lee J Cobb as his opposite number add to his woes, along with being caught up in the 60's drug and crime scene. The story suffers a little from this point of view, as the hippie psychedelic portrayal looks a bit dated, but the action more than makes for this minor complaint. Plenty of pace makes the 95 minute running time zoom by, and even though the ending is more than a little familiar, it's still a very enjoyable movie. Good solid early Eastwood action with a few great moments of comedy thrown in, and a particularly clever choreograghed bar room brawl, complete with pool sticks and balls is worth seeing also, and durability on the rewatching scale makes this a solid buy for fans and newcomers alike. Enjoy
Rating: Summary: Classic Eastwood Urban Western Gets a Makeover Review: Another great Clint Eastwood movie gets the DVD release treatment, and finds Clint playing the title role in this "rural cop in the big city" action drama. This movie paved the way for the long running and succesful (though much more benign) TV series "McCloud" starring Dennis Weaver, and deals with the cultural clash between a Sheriff from Arizona, and NYPD's finest. This is a fairly straightforward story, but handled very well by the Don Siegel in the directors chair, who went on to make other Eastwood gems such as Dirty Harry a couple of years later. Fighting off the constant stereotyping by his New York brother officers, Lt Coogan (Eastwood) is a laconic fish out of water, and has to track down and return to Arizona with escaped killer Ringerman, played by Don Stroud. Red tape, and more than a little obstruction by the locals, mainly in the form of Lee J Cobb as his opposite number add to his woes, along with being caught up in the 60's drug and crime scene. The story suffers a little from this point of view, as the hippie psychedelic portrayal looks a bit dated, but the action more than makes for this minor complaint. Plenty of pace makes the 95 minute running time zoom by, and even though the ending is more than a little familiar, it's still a very enjoyable movie. Good solid early Eastwood action with a few great moments of comedy thrown in, and a particularly clever choreograghed bar room brawl, complete with pool sticks and balls is worth seeing also, and durability on the rewatching scale makes this a solid buy for fans and newcomers alike. Enjoy
Rating: Summary: Long Overdue, Finally Here Review: Ever since Coogan's Bluff parted from the movie theater's after 1968, it's been shown on TV and was available for a short time in VHS format.The visual as well as the audio had been severely compromised. The color was pale, dull, bland etc. and the sound was never right, thus having a negative effect with Eastwood's performance and pushing the limits of the viewer. The movie lacked the quality that you expect to see in a major movie star and from a major movie studio like Universal. Now, for the first time since 68' you can see the movie the way the Director Don Siegel wanted you to see it. Thanks to DVD, the color is restored, sharp and pleasing to the eye, the sound is clear and crisp, you can hear the actors, and let's not overlook the soundtrack by composer Lalo Schifrin. The DVD has Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1 and Dolby 2.0 Mono. Whether you've seen Coogan'Bluff before or haven't does not matter. The Top Notch restoration will give the viewing experience as if your seeing it for the first time. It's that good. Don't let this one pass you by. I've given this movie 4 Stars, the only thing that prevented it from going to 5 Stars, is that there are two scenes deleted from the film. The first is in the beginning scenes of the movie where Eastwood is with his Sheriff in the office and given an unwanted assignment to travel to New York.The other is a short exchange with Eastwood and a Doctor in the hospital. Why were these scenes left out ?
Rating: Summary: Great movie! Review: Great movie! This review is in the VHS section because the U.S. doesn't offer the DVD (as of Feb. 2004). they cut out the scene where is gets even with the airport dudes by messing the one guy up with the pools balls in the bar. I have the DVD that is available in every $%&! country but the US it seems, and they even cut it out of the DVD (oh yeah, the new crack down on physical violence in movies. They sure didn't mind physical violence in movies before 1990). The DVD has beautiful widescreen and multiple languages. (I got the Australian version). Did you see the conquests Coogan has in this movie! spoiler alert* don't read if you haven't seen the movie First he has a go at a married woman ("is he home?") then he has a go with the bad guys girlfriend! All the while pursing a hot brunette, and even turning down a naked club girl whose knockers bump off his hat as she flies into his arms!
Rating: Summary: Good, cracking entertainment Review: I caught this movie on late night TV some time ago and ever since then I've always had a real liking for it. It's not a big, heavy thriller like some of Clint Eastwood's other films, it's just plain, light-hearted fun. It's BULITT with less inteligence but more entertainment. Highly reccomended.
Rating: Summary: A Good Action Police Movie! Review: I first saw this movie when I was in high school some thirty years ago. I recently watched it again at the age of 38. It is still an exciting movie. An Arizona lawman comes to New York looking for a fugitive who has escaped. The Arizona native immediately has trouble with the wild west tactics of Coogan.He still continues on despite these problems.Coogan covers every section of the seedy side of New York in his pursuit of Don Stroud. During all of this chase he is steadilt rubbing the New
York police establishment the wrong way. Eventually the Arizona lawman bags his quarry. This is a good action movie.It has a good plot and the actors and actresses are also very good. This is a movie to see.
Rating: Summary: A more brutal "McCloud," a cleaner "Dirty Harry" Review: The inspiration for TV's long running "McCloud," this first collaboration of Clint Eastwood and director Don Siegel is a violent and frequently funny variation on the fish out of water theme of Frank Capra's "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town." Eastwood is an Arizona lawman hunting down an escaped convict in the urban jungles of New York where his unconventional methods clash with the more bureaucratic minded police force he finds in the Big Apple. Not only would "Coogan's Bluff" pave the way for Dennis Weaver's less brutal "McCloud," it also seems to have inspired Eastwood and Siegel's "Dirty Harry" with its focus on a lawman determined to bring in his man no matter how many civil rights he must ignore to do it.
Rating: Summary: Clint Eastwood gives New York 24 hours...to get out of town! Review: The talented team of Clintus & Sigelini (Clint Eastwood & Don Siegel) show why they paired up in so many outstanding films together with Clint Eastwood's 1968 cowboy foray into New York City ! Eastwood is the quietly spoken, straightforward Arizona lawmen Walt Coogan sent to New York City to return captured escapee James Ringerman (Don Stroud). Coogan slips up, Ringerman escapes and the hunt is on through the bars, discotheques and parks of New York City for the violent criminal. Solid character actor Lee J. Cobb, plays the frustrated New York police Lieutenant McElroy trying to keep Coogan and his rough and tumble Arizona law enforcement methods in check. One can't help but get the feeling that "Coogans Bluff" was almost like a dry run for Clint & Don Siegel for the pair's upcoming 1971 cop thriller "Dirty Harry"....about another maverick law enforcement officer refusing to accept mediocrity ! "Coogans Bluff" is an interesting and stylish work that is still enjoyable to watch. PS. Keep your eyes open in the sequence when Clint enters the discotheque, and they are flashing various images on the walls...you see a very quick glimpse of footage from the 1958 film "Tarantula" where Clint had a bit part as a jet pilot sent to kill the giant arachnid with napalm !!
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