"Actor: Tisha Sterling"

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  • Coogan's Bluff [1968]Coogan's Bluff | DVD | (04/06/2007) from £7.49   |  Saving you £2.50 (33.38%)   |  RRP £9.99

    Clint Eastwood plays Coogan an Arizona cop who is sent to New York to collect a prisoner. Things begin to go wrong when the prisoner escapes and Coogan is ordered home in disgrace. Too proud to return home empty handed Coogan sets out into the big city to recapture his prisoner.

  • Coogan's Bluff [Blu-ray] [2016]Coogan's Bluff | Blu Ray | (12/09/2016) from £18.14   |  Saving you £3.11 (18.42%)   |  RRP £19.99

    Clint Eastwood is Walt Coogan, a deputy sheriff from Arizona on the loose in the urban jungle of New York. Searching for a violent prisoner he has let slip ("It's got kinda personal now"), Coogan, in Stetson and cowboy boots, runs up against hippies, social workers and a bluntly hostile New York police chief played by Lee J. Cobb. It's a key film in the Eastwood oeuvre, the one in which his definitive persona first emerges, marrying the cool, laid-back westerner of the Rawhide TV series and the Italian westerns to the street-wise, kick-ass toughness which would be further developed in the Dirty Harryfilms. Directed by Eastwood's mentor, Don Siegel, Coogan's Bluff has pace, style and its share of typical Eastwood one-liners (to a hoodlum: "You better drop that blade or you won't believe what happens next"). Like all Eastwood's successful movies, it cunningly plays it both ways. Coogan represents the old-fashioned conservatism of the west in conflict with the decadence of city life. Yet he's the perennial outsider, hostile to authority, a radical loner who gets the job done where bureaucracy and legal niceties fail. The film was to be the inspiration behind the TV series McCloud, in which Dennis Weaver took the Eastwood role. --Edward Buscombe

  • Coogan's Bluff [1968]Coogan's Bluff | DVD | (06/06/2005) from £5.19   |  Saving you £0.80 (15.41%)   |  RRP £5.99

    Clint Eastwood is Walt Coogan, a deputy sheriff from Arizona on the loose in the urban jungle of New York. Searching for a violent prisoner he has let slip ("It's got kinda personal now"), Coogan, in Stetson and cowboy boots, runs up against hippies, social workers and a bluntly hostile New York police chief played by Lee J. Cobb. It's a key film in the Eastwood oeuvre, the one in which his definitive persona first emerges, marrying the cool, laid-back westerner of the Rawhide TV series and the Italian westerns to the street-wise, kick-ass toughness which would be further developed in the Dirty Harryfilms. Directed by Eastwood's mentor, Don Siegel, Coogan's Bluff has pace, style and its share of typical Eastwood one-liners (to a hoodlum: "You better drop that blade or you won't believe what happens next"). Like all Eastwood's successful movies, it cunningly plays it both ways. Coogan represents the old-fashioned conservatism of the west in conflict with the decadence of city life. Yet he's the perennial outsider, hostile to authority, a radical loner who gets the job done where bureaucracy and legal niceties fail. The film was to be the inspiration behind the TV series McCloud, in which Dennis Weaver took the Eastwood role. --Edward Buscombe

  • Betrayal [DVD]Betrayal | DVD | (22/08/2011) from £5.38   |  Saving you £-3.39 (N/A%)   |  RRP £1.99

    An elderly woman hires a young woman as her live-in help unaware that the woman and her boyfriend are extortionists who prey on lonely victims. They plan to rob and then kill her before making their getaway...

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