Menu
Cry Macho Poster

Cry Macho

A story of being lost... and found.
2021 | 104m | English

(35853 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Mike Milo, a one-time rodeo star and washed-up horse breeder, takes a job from an ex-boss to bring the man's young son home from Mexico.
Release Date: Sep 16, 2021
Director: Clint Eastwood
Writer: N. Richard Nash, Nick Schenk
Genres: Drama, Western
Keywords mexico, based on novel or book, 1970s, kidnapping, neo-western, animal whisperer, apathetic, disapproving
Production Companies Malpaso Productions, Warner Bros. Pictures, ASR Productions
Box Office Revenue: $16,500,000
Budget: $33,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Job
Joel Cox Editor
Loren Robinson Visual Effects, VFX Artist
Doug Jackson Sound Effects Editor
Jack Van Nuis Compositing Artist
Young-Min KIm Compositing Artist
Joe Laude Compositing Artist
Al Goto Stunts
N. Richard Nash Novel, Screenplay
Ronald R. Reiss Production Design
Deborah Hopper Costume Design
David S. Cox Editor
Kimberly Felix Makeup Department Head
Michael W. Mitchell Sound Effects Editor
Lee Orloff Sound Mixer
Christian Wenger Sound Effects Editor
Adam Ohl Visual Effects Producer
Bonnie Masoner Makeup Artist
Gregory G. Sandoval Supervising Art Director
Thomas Jones Supervising ADR Editor
Dan O'Connell Foley Artist
Arno Stephanian Foley Mixer
Serkan Zelzele Visual Effects Supervisor
Jason Tranetzki Compositing Artist
Jason Sanford Visual Effects Producer
Christopher Carlson Set Decoration
Michael Hertlein Dialogue Editor
Clint Eastwood Director
Ben Davis Director of Photography
Mark Mancina Original Music Composer
Alan Robert Murray Supervising Sound Editor
Tom Ozanich Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Dean A. Zupancic Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Nick Schenk Writer
John Brubaker Visual Effects Supervisor
Tim LeDoux Visual Effects Supervisor
Zach Hamelton Visual Effects Producer
Jon H. Epstein Stunt Double
David M. Bernstein First Assistant Director
Name Title
Jessica Meier Producer
Tim Moore Producer
David M. Bernstein Executive Producer
Albert S. Ruddy Producer
Clint Eastwood Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 30 55 18
2024 5 31 74 16
2024 6 19 27 13
2024 7 28 52 16
2024 8 20 31 12
2024 9 14 22 9
2024 10 19 47 9
2024 11 17 54 9
2024 12 16 31 10
2025 1 19 44 11
2025 2 12 16 3
2025 3 6 21 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 2 1
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 3 2
2025 10 3 4 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 6 557 700
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 423 481
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 836 895

Return to Top

Reviews

itsogs
10.0

Still going strong, Eastwood does not disappoint in his latest movie. And yes, there was even a few minutes of action.⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ ...

Sep 24, 2021
narrator56
7.0

This film was fine, but for me not quite what i expect from Eastward’s more recent efforts. His acting was good in his laid back style and carried the movie in places, I thought, but I was a bit distracted by the more lackluster performance of a few others. Dwight Yoakum, for example, whose singing ... I have always enjoyed, seemed to deliver his lines woodenly at times. But I won’t dwell on critiquing here and there. Overall it was watchable. It just seems like it could have shown more spark if Eastward had lit a fire under a few butts during some of the scenes. Maybe by planting that doleful, slow-burn stare on them, hand twitching near the holster that wasn’t there.

Nov 04, 2021
r96sk
7.0

A mid Clint Eastwood flick. <em>'Cry Macho'</em> is passable, I had a fine time with it as I got suitable enjoyment. I wasn't overly invested but I don't have any noteworthy issues either. It narrowly gets a 7/10 rating from yours truly. At the age of 91, Eastwood is still acting, directing an ... d producing movies - you gotta admire his longevity! He remains entertaining to watch, having come a long way since that debuting (uncredited) role in 1955's <em>'<a href="https://letterboxd.com/film/revenge-of-the-creature/" rel="nofollow">Revenge of the Creature</a>'</em>. There isn't much to note about the cast behind the lead, though Eduardo Minett and Natalia Traven are alright. I have nothing else to say. It's a satisfactory film.

Feb 15, 2022
katch22
4.0

The writing was pitiful, and the acting was mediocre, at best. Clint Eastwood is way too old to even attempt being a romantic lead. The senoritas making a play for him was farcical. He's also too old to be an action star. As far as bustin' broncos, you could almost see the stunt man being called ... in to take the reins. The kid was supposed to be a streetwise hellion, but the only hint of that was that he could apparently boost old cars. Overall, if you have good memories of Clint Eastwood, my advice is to skip this movie and avoid tarnishing your image of Clint.

Mar 13, 2022
tmdb28039023
4.0

One of the best scenes in Cry Macho involves sign language. It’s not even a scene, really; just a brief exchange of the short-but-sweet variety. I mention it because I wish more of the film were like that. The two protagonists speak English, and yet there is a language barrier issue going on here ... . Specifically, the actor who plays Rafael, Eduardo Minett, makes you go for the 'mute' button almost every time he opens his mouth — the exception being when he falls back on his native Spanish. It’s not the young man’s fault, and it happens to the best of them; just listen to Jean Gabin in Moontide, or Javier Bardem in Loving Pablo, or Salma Hayek, Sofia Vergara, and Penelope Cruz in any of their English-speaking roles. Now, I understand he’s playing a Mexican boy who speaks English as a Second Language, and I’m also aware that his character is not meant to ingratiate himself with the audience immediately, of even fully — indeed, Rafael remains largely unchanged and unwiser until the end, but I’d like to think this is by design; the film as a whole may be viewed as a short section of a very long circle, and Mike (Clint Eastwood) and Rafael’s intriguing next-to-last conversation foreshadows the latter character’s narrative arc eventually going all the way around to where he is as sensible, though presumably also as old, as his current companion. We find out only slightly more about where Mike is coming from than what we can guess at about where Rafael is headed, but the one’s past and the other’s future are heavily implied in both men’s present; the irony is that Rafael couldn’t skip the poor choices that await him any more than Mike — whose admonitions fall, Cassandra-like, on deaf ears; wisdom is earned, and non-transferable — can go back and avoid his own missteps. The movie’s events are thus, for lack of a better term, Rafael’s preschool of hard knocks. Or maybe I’m just reading too much into it; perhaps this is just what my brain occupied itself with while I tuned Minnet and his execrable English accent out. Eastwood would have done well to make Rafael as ignorant of English as Mike is of Spanish (or, why not, have Rafael refuse to speak Mike’s language until the conclusion, to the latter’s surprise, after finally having gained a modicum of the former’s respect), so there could have been more non-verbal communication.

Sep 06, 2022
Wuchak
7.0

**_Teaching a boy the ropes of life while traveling through Mexico_** An old-as-dirt ex-rodeo star (Clint Eastwood) is given the task of bringing back the early- teen son of a rancher (Eduardo Minett and Dwight Yoakam respectively) from Mexico City to west Texas in which they have several misadve ... ntures. Fernanda Urrejola plays the boy’s mother while Natalia Traven is on hand as a woman they meet along the way. “Cry Macho” (2021) has similarities to past Eastwood flicks, like “The Mule” (2018), “Gran Torino” (2008), “A Perfect World” (1993), “Honkytonk Man” (1982) and “Bronco Billy” (1980). It’s a road movie wherein the characters get to know each other as they go from one experience to another. The nuance here is contrast of one character coming-of-age while the other is coming-near-death. There’s drama, humor, potential violence and a hint of romance. Like “The Mule” and “Bronco Billy,” it’s thoroughly mundane, but also somehow (a little) revelational and heartwarming. "All the Pretty Horses" (2000) is also comparable, as is "Rambo: Last Blood" (2019), just minus the action. The film runs 1 hour, 44 minutes, and was shot in the heart of New Mexico (Belen and Polvadera). GRADE: B/B-

Jun 24, 2023