Sunday, 17 July 2011

Clint Eastwood is Bronco Billy (1980)

Bronco Billy was a 1980 American film starring Clint Eastwood and his then long term lover Sondra Locke. It was directed by Eastwood and written by Dennis Hackin.
The film revolves around "Bronco Billy's Wild West Show", a run-down traveling circus, the star of which is Bronco Billy McCoy (Clint Eastwood), the "fastest gun in the West." For the show's finale, a blindfolded Bronco Billy shoots balloons around a female assistant on a revolving wooden disc, and for the last balloon, he throws a knife. However, the assistant's leg is nicked, so she quits. The show is not making any money, and nobody has been paid for months.

The show moves on to a new town and Bronco Billy goes to City Hall to get a permit. While there, he bumps into Antoinette Lily (Sondra Locke) and John Arlington (Geoffrey Lewis), who are there to be married. Antoinette despises her future husband, but has to marry before she is thirty in order to inherit a large fortune. Afterwards, their car breaks down at the motel opposite the Wild West Show. The next morning, Arlington steals all her money and their repaired car. She is left to fend for herself.

Bronco Billy eventually talks Antoinette into becoming his new assistant, "Miss Lily", though she only agrees to do one show. The show of her first performance is unusually successful, although Miss Lily irritates Billy by not sticking to the script.

Leaving the show, Antoinette discovers that Arlington has been arrested for her murder (framed by Antoinette's stepmother and her scheming lawyer friend, who stand to gain her inheritance). Seizing the chance to get even with Arlington, Antoinette rejoins the Wild West Show.

She discovers that none of the performers are real Cowboys: they are mostly ex-convicts or alcoholics (or both). Bronco Billy was a shoe salesman who shot his wife for sleeping with his best friend. Nevertheless, Miss Lily begins to warm to the troupe.

Two of the show's performers announce that they are going to have a baby. The crew goes to a bar to celebrate. One of them gets himself arrested by police who discover that he is a deserter from the Army. Bronco Billy uses the show's meager savings to bribe the sheriff into letting the man go, swallowing his pride and enduring the sheriff's verbal humiliations for his friend's sake. Then the circus tent burns down. Everyone blames Miss Lily for their bad luck, but Bronco Billy defends her and proposes that they rob a train. They try to do this in the standard Western way (riding alongside and jumping on), but a modern train proves to be resistant to such an approach and they give up.

Next, the troupe travels to a mental institution at which they have previously performed pro bono. The head of the institution, who is obsessed with the Wild West, agrees to provide them with accommodation and to supply a new tent, and the inmates sew one out of American flags. Miss Lily and Bronco Billy spend the night together. By chance, one of the inmates turns out to be Arlington (he had been paid by the crooked lawyer to confess to being mentally disturbed when he "murdered" Antoinette). When he sees her, he raises a fuss and gets himself released. Bronco Billy and the show depart without Miss Lily.

Antoinette returns to a luxurious lifestyle, but she is bored and misses Billy, who drowns his loneliness with alcohol. The two reunite when Miss Lily returns to the circus.

Bronco Billy
Bronco Billy - 27 x 40 Movie Poster - Style H

Directed byClint Eastwood
Produced byDennis Hackin
Neil Dobrofsky
Written byDennis Hackin
StarringClint Eastwood
Sondra Locke
Geoffrey Lewis
Scatman Crothers
Bill McKinney
Dan Vadis
Sam Bottoms
Sierra Pecheur
Music bySnuff Garrett
CinematographyDavid Worth
Editing byJoel Cox
Ferris Webster
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date(s)June 11, 1980
Running time116 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$6.5 million

1 comment:

  1. Buddy, you have one great nostalgia site.

    When you have the time, check out my latest review of this Clint Documentary - http://www.comicbookandmoviereviews.com/2011/08/clint-eastwood-out-of-shadows.html - as well as some of my movie reviews on this mans great work too.

    By the way, would you consider a link-exchange with my site?

    If so, contact me through it.

    ReplyDelete