Could not agree more with you! (as a side comment I'm told GM built Fiat 1.9 16V engines have the oil fitler above the horizontal drive shaft at the back of the engine and Fiat built 1.9 16V engines have it somewhere else....? other may care to comment).
Back to the Croma. NOTE! I'm assuming the 8V engine has the oil filter in the same place as the 16V engine!
This is how I do it and the tools required.
1) 1/2" inch rachet drive
2) 32mm socket
3) 1/2" universal joint
3) 2 or 3 1/2" extension bars
4) length of rubber tube to connect to the filter housing drain pipe
With the above you can get the socket square on the (stupidly) plastic 32mm filter cap. Into the socket you place the universal drive. Into the universal drive you place as many extension bars as is required to go out into the O/S wheel arch. Then attach the ratchet.
This is where is gets messy.
In theory with the drain tube attached to the filter housing you can slowly undo the top cap. One released from fully tightened position you may be able to use the cap edge ripples to unscrew by hand. Never really worked for me so I just carried on with the ratchet. At some point in the unscrew process oil will start to drain out of the tube. (this is in theory ..... often a lottery). Once the oil stops flowing you car on removing the end cap. With luck the housing will be drained down. If not "splat".
The splat is not so bad as the oil that lands on the back of block horizontal drive shaft, and then the oil runs off and ALONG to shaft dripping off in multiple locations.
This all happens when you hands are full of drives, filter cap and trying to move/replace the catch bucket.
Put plenty of paper/towling down, have more spare to hand, or preferably rent an octopus to do the job.
I would also suggest you use ramps, jack & stands, or drive onto some wooden blocks to get the front end.
Once the filter housing has finished draining wipe the inside surfaces clean. Gently finger lube the cap seals that come with the filter (I think there are two but don't quote me on this) and fit to cap. Add a finger smear of oil to the inside surface of housing, stuff the filter in and replace the cap.
The cap should be now fairly easy to tighten down by hand. GENTLY nip up with 1/2" drive.
NOTE! The oil seal, unlike a traditional cartridge opposing faces seal is made as the cap pushes the seal into the tapered housing. This means that the cap should NOT be over tightened. As long as the cap outer lip meets flushly with the housing then only the smallest amount of nipping up it required to stop the cap vibrating free.
Oh yes! Suggest you wear a pair of safety goggles to avoid and oil getting in the eye.
Hope this helps
Nick