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Honkytonk Man

  • 1982
  • PG
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Clint Eastwood and Kyle Eastwood in Honkytonk Man (1982)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:24
1 Video
53 Photos
Dark ComedyComedyDramaMusicWestern

A boy with a music talent goes on a journey with his uncle for a stage concert.A boy with a music talent goes on a journey with his uncle for a stage concert.A boy with a music talent goes on a journey with his uncle for a stage concert.

  • Director
    • Clint Eastwood
  • Writer
    • Clancy Carlile
  • Stars
    • Clint Eastwood
    • Kyle Eastwood
    • John McIntire
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Clint Eastwood
    • Writer
      • Clancy Carlile
    • Stars
      • Clint Eastwood
      • Kyle Eastwood
      • John McIntire
    • 47User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
    • 50Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Honkytonk Man
    Trailer 2:24
    Honkytonk Man

    Photos53

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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Clint Eastwood
    Clint Eastwood
    • Red Stovall
    Kyle Eastwood
    Kyle Eastwood
    • Whit
    John McIntire
    John McIntire
    • Grandpa
    Alexa Kenin
    Alexa Kenin
    • Marlene
    Verna Bloom
    Verna Bloom
    • Emmy
    Matt Clark
    Matt Clark
    • Virgil
    Barry Corbin
    Barry Corbin
    • Arnspriger
    Jerry Hardin
    Jerry Hardin
    • Snuffy
    Tim Thomerson
    Tim Thomerson
    • Highway Patrolman
    Macon McCalman
    Macon McCalman
    • Dr. Hines
    Joe Regalbuto
    Joe Regalbuto
    • Henry Axle
    Gary Grubbs
    Gary Grubbs
    • Jim Bob
    Rebecca Clemons
    • Belle
    Johnny Gimble
    • Bob Wills
    Linda Hopkins
    Linda Hopkins
    • Blues Singer
    Bette Ford
    Bette Ford
    • Lulu
    Jim Boelsen
    Jim Boelsen
    • Junior
    Tracey Walter
    Tracey Walter
    • Pooch
    • Director
      • Clint Eastwood
    • Writer
      • Clancy Carlile
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.69.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7bkoganbing

    Put Your Arms Around This Honky Tonk Man

    One of Clint Eastwood's more personal projects is Honkytonk Man where he both gets to do some singing and also to work with his then adolescent son Kyle. Apparently Kyle Eastwood has inherited the musical part of the Eastwood genes because he makes his living now as a jazz musician. I wonder if he ever jams with Woody Allen?

    Clint did not exactly set the world on fire in his previous musical outing in Paint Your Wagon. But in Honky Tonk Man he's right in his element as a hard living country singer during the Depression trying to finally catch a break with the Grand Ole Opry.

    Arriving at his sister's farm, Clint picks up both Kyle who is playing his nephew here and John McIntire who is Kyle's grandfather on his father's side and the three generations start out from Oklahoma to Nashville.

    Eastwood has played some hard bitten characters in his films, but never one as dissolute as Red Stovall. His high living has brought him a case of tuberculosis, a lot more common and a lot less curable back in those days. In any event the peace and quiet of a sanitarium holds no interest for Clint. He'd rather go out drinking and wenching than die of boredom in a sanitarium.

    Of course the odyssey of the three bring any number of adventures about life and love in their lives.

    John McIntire fits right in with the father and son Eastwoods. Also look for good performances by blues singer Linda Hopkins, young Alexa Kenan who hitches a ride with the travelers, and a cheating Barry Corbin who Clint collects from in the usual Eastwood manner. All and all a nice family project from the clan Eastwood.
    7lost-in-limbo

    Don't get too cozy.

    An under appreciated 80s effort (being Eastwood's ninth stint directing a major feature), which rarely gets a mention and if so it mainly gets a "meh". This Clint Eastwood directed/performed feature 'Honkytonk Man' shows much more a vulnerable Eastwood in a very dramatic role (of an aging, alcoholic drifting country singer) that asked a lot from him. Set during the period of the great depression that ravaged the 1930s, Eastwood manages to capture the authentic atmosphere and dusty locations of the times with Bruce Surtees's earthy photography and his very-grounded direction, but also letting the harshness move over for some very sentimental openings that never manipulate the situations. There's a real homegrown feel, mixing elements of a coming of age story to someone longing to be somebody and this is all coming together to learn not to take everything on face-value. We watch two people, fulfilling a dream as it ignites the passion leaving to a series of adventures and an insightful script exploring the interactions.

    It's an inspired turn by Eastwood, but his son Kyle Eastwood is just as impressive in a sincerely down-to-earth performance as the young lad Whit, the 14 year old nephew that makes sure that he gets his uncle to the Gran Ole Opry stage to do his thing… albeit trying to keep him sober to perform. Along for the journey you'll find the likes of John McIntire, Alexa Kenin, Tim Thomerson, Barry Corbin, Macon McCalman, Joe Regalbuto and Charles Cyphers making up a splendidly admirable cast. A very heart-warming Verna Bloom and sturdy Matt Clark do leave their marks as Whit's worrying parents. While rather long, the chemistry makes sure the story marvelously flows and the relax temperament lets the emotional factor seep in. I don't know, but I found it hard not to like. The score is a perfectly delightful country twang featuring numerous names in Marty Robbins, Frizzel and West, Ray Price, Linda Hopkins and supervised by Snuff Garrett. Let's not forget Eastwood himself adding to the arrangement.

    A wonderfully brassy and enterprising Eastwood fable.
    8Cantoris-2

    Verismo!

    The critics didn't like this film, but I beg to differ. Perhaps I'm naive and gullible, but to me it rings true in its local color and the coping of poor people in the Depression amidst the aspirations of young and old alike.

    My father, a published author in a small way, once mused to me that if he were to write a novel, it would be about someone trying to come to terms with his own mediocrity. Such is the theme of this movie, and hardly typical a consideration it is in a time when the media bombard us coast to coast, for our adulation, with the glamorous images of a mere handful of individuals who happen to have landed vast fame and fortune. What does any of this have to do with most of us? On the one hand, we live day to day. On the other, a recurring dream whispers "maybe..."

    Knowing that he is living on borrowed time, Red, humble and hand-to-mouth but respected more than he knows by a few somewhat more successful colleagues (and an unusually fallible and vulnerable character for Eastwood, which he plays well) is granted, in extremis, an apparent opportunity to reach for the stars. More down-to-earth, he is also fortuitously blessed/burdened with not just one but two young proteges: first his nephew, then also a girl at loose ends. Perhaps neither is particularly talented; nevertheless both have a claim on his attention which he reluctantly fulfills in his own unassuming way, while making no exalted pretenses as to their prospects. When on his deathbed he can do no more for them, he commends them to each other. "You take care of her, now" he rasps to Whit. "She's okay. Help her with her singing." While they may never reach celebrity, the texture of life can sustain them if they face it together.

    As, dying and perhaps delirious, he gazes up into Marlene's face, he sees the "raw-boned Okie woman" he had loved for several years as a mistress, and whom he later had regretted leaving. She had borne a girl whom he had never met. Marlene was a fatherless waif of about the right age. Did he recognize at the last moment his long-lost daughter? It is a question which the film leaves hanging in the air. Does genealogy matter? In practical terms, that is what she became almost too late.

    For my money, it's a raw-boned, American Okie "La Boheme."
    dbdumonteil

    Anti hero.

    It took a lot of nerve in the early eighties,in the days of Rocky,Indiana Jones and "fame" to portray such a human wreck.Eastwood's character recalls Hank Williams,one of the few country singers whose songs experimented tragedy ("I'll never get out of this world alive"). The difference lies in the fact that the singer here will remain an obscure artist.

    A road movie,it features an interesting boy character who learns the harsh realities of life.In the short space of a couple of days,he will have experimented love (first in a brothel,then probably later with the girl they met along the road) and death (he'll have to cope with a burial).The young female "singer" they -reluctantly-take with them provides the movie with the comic relief it does need:you should hear her sing "My bonnie" in a shrill voice.

    The ballads Eastwood sings are moving and tuneful(I don't know if he is dubbed for them,but anyway it's made with taste and respect for the audience).The audition is the highlight of the movie,Eastwood seems to sing as if it were a matter of life and death(and it is anyway).The actor/director avoids pathos and melodrama.Once again,it was a very risky move to play such a character at a time when success story was the golden rule.The movie was bound to be a flop,but it deserves to be restored to favor now.
    8jhmb2003

    minor classic

    Despite almost every critic I've read, I think this is a real gem by Clint Eastwood. A honest, sensitive effort in the road movie tradition. The minor tone, the naive sequences soothe Red Stovall's journey to his fate. The movie also displays a touching view of the depression era in USA. Like animated Roy Emerson Stryker's pictures the photography is remarkable as well as the sound track. I've learned about lots of singers and musicians that recorded only to give a final testimony of their art. I guess stories like these deserved a movie like Honkytonk Man. Long life to Clint, one of the most underrated talents not only in Hollywood but in the rest of the world.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The script originally called for Whit (Kyle Eastwood) to get high from smoking marijuana, but Clint Eastwood, who is very anti-drug, refused, even with Kyle using a prop cigarette. Eastwood finally relented to his son's character getting high from a contact buzz.
    • Goofs
      Ryman Auditorium is used as the setting for the Opry. This venue was not used until the 1940s, and the movie takes place in the 1930s.
    • Quotes

      Whit: Holy shit! I'm going to Tennessee!

    • Alternate versions
      ABC edited 7 minutes from this film for its 1986 network television premiere.
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Dueling Critics (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Honkytonk Man
      Sung by Marty Robbins and Clint Eastwood

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 15, 1982 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El aventurero de medianoche
    • Filming locations
      • Fallon, Nevada, USA(scene with bull)
    • Production company
      • The Malpaso Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,484,991
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $667,727
      • Dec 19, 1982
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,484,991
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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