Arizona Republic by Bill Goodykoontz
There is a craggy kind of elegance to Cry Macho. You know what you’re getting for the most part. This does not include a lot of surprises. It does include comfort in the familiar. Eastwood has earned that, too.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United States · 2021
Director Clint Eastwood
Starring Clint Eastwood, Eduardo Minett, Natalia Traven, Dwight Yoakam
Genre Drama, Thriller, Western
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
Mike Milo, a washed-up rodeo star, takes a job from his former boss to bring the man's young son back to Texas from rural Mexico, where the boy lives with his alcoholic mother. During the journey, Milo not only braves unexpected setbacks, but finds hope for his own redemption.
Arizona Republic by Bill Goodykoontz
There is a craggy kind of elegance to Cry Macho. You know what you’re getting for the most part. This does not include a lot of surprises. It does include comfort in the familiar. Eastwood has earned that, too.
Consequence by Clint Worthington
One of Eastwood's most pleasing character studies since Million Dollar Baby.
The latest of Eastwood’s many potential swan songs, this sketch of a movie is transparent enough to focus all of your attention on the shadow imagery behind it. On the brimmed silhouette that its director and star cuts in a door frame, on the six pounds of gravel that it sounds like he gargled before every take, and on the way that he plays Mike as a man who would give anything for a place to hang his hat if only he could bring himself to take it off his head. Better late than never.
The Hollywood Reporter by David Rooney
This is a story so crusty and antiquated in its conveniently resolved conflicts, contrivances and drippy sentimentality that it should have been left on the shelf.
San Francisco Chronicle by G. Allen Johnson
But Eastwood is undercut by the unbearably weak screenplay by Nick Schenk, who adapts a 1975 novel by N. Richard Nash. Schenk has turned in good work for Eastwood before, including “Gran Torino” and “The Mule,” but here his strategy seems to be having his characters explain everything that they’re doing and feeling, much of which should be delivered visually. Action is character, after all.
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The fact is that, as a movie, Cry Macho is slow and sometimes dull. But as a statement by Hollywood’s oldest leading man and working director, it offers its share of gleaming low-key insights.
Eastwood’s been riding off into the sunset for decades now, and Cry Macho’s creaky, lackadaisical hat-wave is a feature-length parody of a golden oldie.
It’s friendly and diverting and formulaic, in an inoffensive and good-natured way, and it’s a totally minor affair.
A road movie that, considering who made it, starts pretty far down that road, Cry Macho is familiar and loose, sometimes rattly, occasionally wince-inducing, and in a few moments genuine in ways no one else seems to know how to do anymore.
From the film’s first moments, the audience can guess exactly how the story will pan out, and the pleasure is watching Eastwood gracefully negotiate every well-worn twist and turn.
In southern France, a Franco-Arabic shipyard worker, assisted by his partner's daughter, pursues his dream of opening a restaurant.
An unending darkness... A world of shadows... A ray of light that found its way... A teacher's dream... A student's miracle... A valiant journey... From ignorance to knowledge... From darkness to light... An extraordinary story of an ordinary life.
Innocence is a dangerous friend.
A secretary from Ohio takes a solo trip to Venice, as she hopes to take advantage of her dream vacation.
30% human, 70% robot, 100% lethal.
Love is insatiable.
An Evil Secret Awaits...
A retired author reluctantly joins a young publisher on a book tour.
A veteran finds a fulfillment in the Amazon when he gets the chance to foster a baby ocelot.