Holy!
Need help, sir?
Officer, hi.
You need help?
No, no.
No, I'm fine, thank you.
What do you got there?
Little pecans.
I'm delivering pecans to my niece.
-Pecans? -Yeah, pecans.
She makes the worst pecan pie you've ever tasted.
I feel sorry for her husband, but...
And I feel sorry for the pecans, too.
[barking]
Come on, now. Come on.


Family's the most important thing.
Don't do what I did.
I put work in front of family.
I thought it was more important to be somebody out there...
than the damn failure I was in my own home.
I was a terrible father...
terrible husband.
Blew my chance.
I didn't deserve forgiveness.
This is the last one.
So help me God...
this is the last one.
For what it's worth...
I'm sorry for everything.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Earl Stone, a man in his 80s who is broke, alone, and facing foreclosure of his business when he is offered a job that simply requires him to drive. Easy enough, but, unbeknownst to Earl, he’s just signed on as a drug courier for a Mexican cartel. He does well - so well, in fact, that his cargo increases exponentially, and Earl is assigned a handler. But he isn’t the only one keeping tabs on Earl; the mysterious new drug mule has also hit the radar of hard-charging DEA agent Colin Bates. And even as his money problems become a thing of the past, Earl’s past mistakes start to weigh heavily on him, and it’s uncertain if he’ll have time to right those wrongs before law enforcement, or the cartel’s enforcers, catch up to him. “The Mule” marks Oscar-winner Eastwood’s first time on both sides of the camera since he starred in 2009’s critically acclaimed “Gran Torino.”

Add comment

Security code
Refresh