Pink Cadillac (film) explained

Pink Cadillac
Director:Buddy Van Horn
Producer:David Valdes
Michael Gruskoff
Starring:
  • Clint Eastwood
  • Bernadette Peters
Music:Steve Dorff
Cinematography:Jack N. Green
Editing:Joel Cox
Studio:Malpaso Productions
Distributor:Warner Bros.
Runtime:122 minutes
Language:English
Country:United States
Budget:$19 million
Gross:$12.1 million

Pink Cadillac is a 1989 American action comedy film directed by Buddy Van Horn, about a bounty hunter and a group of white supremacists chasing after an innocent woman who tries to outrun everyone in her husband's prized pink Cadillac. The film stars Clint Eastwood and Bernadette Peters and also has small cameo appearances by Jim Carrey and Bryan Adams. Pink Cadillac marks the third and final collaboration between Eastwood and director Buddy Van Horn, following Any Which Way You Can (1980) and The Dead Pool (1988), as well as Van Horn's final film as a director and Eastwood's final comedy film.

Plot

A white supremacist group is chasing Lou Ann, whose husband, Roy, is a member. She has inadvertently taken counterfeit money from them by running away with his car (the pink Cadillac), which held the supremacists' stash.

Tommy Nowak is a skip-tracer whose speciality is dressing up in disguises, such as a rodeo clown, to fool whomever he is after. Tommy takes on the job of finding Lou Ann because she skipped bail.

When he finally finds her in Reno, Nevada, Tommy slowly becomes enamored. Roy and his gang kidnap her baby, whom Lou Ann has left with her sister, so Tommy decides to help Lou Ann get the baby back instead of turning her in. While driving through the West, seeking the baby, romance blossoms. They eventually fight the white supremacists and retrieve the baby.

Cast

Production

Filming began in late 1988, and took place in Utah and Nevada.[1] Parts filmed in Quincy, Cresent Mills, west shore lake almanor, all Plumas County

Soundtrack

Pink Cadillac
Type:soundtrack
Artist:various artists
Released:[2]
Length:32:49
Label:Warner Bros.
Producer:Jim Ed Norman

The film's soundtrack features ten songs, all done by various country and rock artists. The album peaked at number 45 on the Billboard Top Country Albums in July 1989.[3]

Track listing

Reception

The film received generally poor reviews. Caryn James wrote: "When it's time to look back on the strange sweep of Clint Eastwood's career, from his ambitious direction of Bird to his coarse, classic Dirty Harry character, Pink Cadillac will probably settle comfortably near the bottom of the list. It is the laziest sort of action comedy, with lumbering chase scenes, a dull-witted script and the charmless pairing of Mr. Eastwood and Bernadette Peters." (New York Times, May 26, 1989.)

Hal Hinson praised the performers: Peters "...plays her comic scenes with a vivacious abandon..." She "loosens him (Eastwood) up... and humanizes him. These two make a nifty comic team."[4]

Pink Cadillac was released in May 1989, opening against Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. The film eventually grossed $12,143,484. In contrast, the movie Eastwood made just prior to Pink Cadillac, the fifth Dirty Harry movie, The Dead Pool, grossed $37,903,295.[5] Perhaps due to the poor reviews and meager box office, the film is, as of 2021, Eastwood's last action comedy.

It has a 24% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 21 reviews. It also went direct to video in the United Kingdom, without a cinema release.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Hughes, p.129
  2. Web site: Pink Cadillac soundtrack . Allmusic . March 4, 2019.
  3. Chart history for Pink Cadillac soundtrack . Billboard . 4 March 2019.
  4. Hinson, Hal.‘Pink Cadillac’ (PG-13)".Washington Post, May 26, 1989
  5. https://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=pinkcadillac.htm "Eastwood boxoffice"