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misty71
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I'm a guitar player
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« Reply #1 on: July 14, 2003, 11:18:00 AM » |
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I have to admit, I was SO mad the first time I saw the ending  I though, did he really have to lose both the girl and the fight? Isnt the movie called Every Which way BUT loose? But I got used to it.I would have prefered it if hed won the fight you know.Because people made fun of him because of Clyde, and I wanted him to show the world how good he really was at fighting. Actually, no, I havent got used to the ending...it annoys me.I wish hed still lose the girl, but won the fight.
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« Last Edit: July 14, 2003, 11:18:33 AM by misty71 »
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"I've never had a problem with drugs. I've had problems with the police." Keith Richards
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Matt
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« Reply #2 on: July 14, 2003, 04:21:06 PM » |
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Who am I to question Clint on why Philo Beddoe threw the fight? Well, I'm going to anyway. He didn't write the script.  Moments before Philo met up with Tank Murdock, he lost one of the things that mattered most to him in the world... Lynn Halsey-Taylor. Okay, he never really had her, but he didn't know that. Chasing her from California to Denver... I have to believe that he imagined himself building a life with this woman. I have to believe he thought she felt the same feelings for him that he did for her. And not only did she tell him she didn't want to see him anymore, but she hit him, and she beat him, and she yelled at him that she hated him, and she called him stupid. He lost her in a severe way. He now knows what loss feels like more than he probably ever had before. He walks away from that situation and right into the next where he's finally going to fight the legendary Tank Murdock... a man whose reputation was so great, that it spanned several states. He expected a tough competitor, he expected a challenge. Instead, he got an out-of-shape, older man still wearing his high-school sweater, as if he was clinging onto nothing but memories of his youth... as if his reputation and the past were all that mattered to him. Philo knows immediately that he could take him, and he was ready to. Until he heard the crowd say things like, "He's gonna beat Tank Murdock!" or "Tank's all washed up," and other derogatory remarks shouted at Tank. Philo looks into Murdock's eyes and he sees the fear of what this loss will do to his life. And as the crowd boos Murdock over and over, Philo changes his mind about wanting to win the fight and lets him beat him. Philo laid there and heard the men cheering their legendary hero and knew that he had given that man back his dignity and his reputation... perhaps those same things that he felt he had just lost himself. And perhaps by so doing, he regained his own lost dignity. I can't think of a more apt ending to this film... it shows great character and great dignity for Philo to have done that, and is probably my single most favorite moment of this film.
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D'Ambrosia
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« Reply #4 on: July 25, 2003, 09:21:37 AM » |
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My initial reaction was that Philo let Tank win because he didn't want all the fuss and attention that would go with beating him, and with being the acknowledged best bare-knuckle fighter around. Despite showing other fighters (and the Black Widows!) who's boss, Philo is essentially a quiet, humble guy. He had just been hurt by the loss of Lynn, and probably just wanted to go home and lick his wounds in obscurity. That's my take on it to Lilly. I don't think Philo all of a sudden feels compassion for Tank. On the contrary, he could give two turds about him. Just like the surrounding crowd. As soon as Philo starts winning, the crowd is like "He's washed up, he's done..." "This guy is the new Tank Murdock..." Were going to make lot's of money on him..." As soon as you don't win any more people don't want you, or they turn on you. It's a false front of people who pretend to be your friend, but as soon as you don't give them what they want, they turn thier backs on you. He just got taken for a big ride by Lynn and doesn't want to deal with all of that crap of being the new champion and all... I don't buy it that he feels sorry for Tank. Just doesn't work for me...
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« Last Edit: July 25, 2003, 09:22:54 AM by DAmbrosia »
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Matt
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« Reply #7 on: August 03, 2003, 07:16:02 PM » |
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I don't think Philo cared about TANK as much as he just naturally cares about people in general. As mgk wrote, it's shown over and over in the film. And the man he had always wanted to fight... the legendary Tank Murdock turned out to be a 40+ year old man, clearly out of shape, who still wore his letter sweater from High School. He was surrounded by his friends and fans who were suddenly booing him and talking about him being all washed up. Like mgk, I just don't see Philo as the kind of man who was so concerned with himself that he was even thinking of himself and his future at that point, but I can definitely see him as someone who would throw a fight to preserve another man's reputation.
I've watched the scene closely a few times, and I can see both sides, I suppose it could go either way. But when I think of Philo's character and the kind of man he's shown us he is... this seems to be more in his nature.
I know it's just a story, but I've even wondered if Tank would have retired after that fight, knowing that he had been beat. He had to have known Philo had thrown the fight, and probably wondered himself... why.
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« Last Edit: August 03, 2003, 07:33:34 PM by Matt »
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