Legendary
Hollywood actor/writer/director Clint Eastwood has maintained a steady creative
pace and enjoyed a level of director clout not seen since the heyday of Stanley
Kubrick or more recently Quentin Tarantino or Christopher Nolan. A mainstream master who has honed his craft
to such a precise degree from top to bottom you know the kind of film you’re
settling into, Eastwood has achieved such creative autonomy he’s been able to
crank out picture after picture almost annually. At the ripe old age of 91, COVID-19 or not,
the screen icon in his forty-second feature film as a director has generated
both a long-gestating big screen adaptation of The Rainmaker novelist N. Richard Nash’s 1975 neo-western book Cry Macho as well as offering up
Eastwood’s own self-reflexive career summation thematically as well as
personally.
Originally
written as a screenplay under the title Macho
until failures to sell it forced the writer to revise the work as a novel
retitled Cry Macho, the film follows
Texas rodeo star Mike Milo (Clint Eastwood) whose career is cut short by a near
fatal back injury during horseback riding.
Wiling the time away breeding and training horses before losing his job
in 1979 from his former boss Howard Polk (Dwight Yoakam), he is summoned by
Polk to travel to Mexico in the hopes of retrieving his son Rafael “Rafo” Polk
(Eduardo Minett) from the clutches of his abusive nymphomaniac mother Leta
(Fernanda Urrejola). Upon arrival in
Mexico, Mike learns Rafael has fled to the streets and turned to a life of
crime involving cockfights with a rooster named Macho.
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Courtesy of Warner Brothers Pictures |
--Andrew Kotwicki