Clint Eastwood’s 41st film as director, Cry Macho, is much like the nonagenarian himself: slow-moving, a bit stiff around the joints, but confident and noble-hearted. You can sense an alternative point of view in its relaxed, assured style and in the dignity it affords each character. Based on a 1975 novel by N. Richard Nash, the film reunites Eastwood and the screenwriter of Gran Torino and The Mule, Nick Schenk. Nash wrote the original draft of the script in the 1970s and Robert Mitchum and Arnold Schwarzenegger were each considered for the lead role.
Eastwood plays Mike Milo, an over-the-hill rodeo star whose boss, Howard Polk (Dwight Yoakam), puts him out to pasture in the opening scene. A year later, Polk visits Milo and tasks him with retrieving his 13-year-old son, Rafo (Eduarto Minett). Polk lost custody in a bitter divorce, and hasn’t seen the boy in years. Indebted to Polk for all his years of friendship, Milo agrees to “kidnap” Rafo, and soon tracks him to Mexico City, where he finds him living on the street, betting on cock fights with a rooster named Macho.
Rafo’s mother, Leta (Fernanda Urrejola), turns out to be a wealthy party girl with no interest in raising her son, but with no intention of letting him go, either. She sends her bodyguards to wrest him away from Milo, and the old man finds himself running away from both the henchmen and the Federales.
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