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McCabe & Mrs. Miller

R Released Jun 24, 1971 2h 1m Western List
85% Tomatometer 62 Reviews 86% Audience Score 5,000+ Ratings
Charismatic gambler John McCabe (Warren Beatty) arrives in a mining community and decides to open a brothel. The local residents are impressed by his confident demeanor and fast talk, but crafty prostitute Constance Miller (Julie Christie) sees through McCabe's words and realizes he isn't as sharp as he seems. For a share in his profits, Mrs. Miller agrees to help plan and run McCabe's establishment, but soon a powerful company threatens to destroy what they have built up. Read More Read Less
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McCabe & Mrs. Miller

What to Know

Critics Consensus

McCabe & Mrs. Miller offers revisionist Western fans a landmark early addition to the genre while marking an early apogee for director Robert Altman.

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Critics Reviews

View All (62) Critics Reviews
Jake Wilson The Age (Australia) Robert Altman's wintry 1971 anti-Western gives Warren Beatty one of his best roles as the doomed gambler McCabe: boastful, shy, foolish, altogether lovable. Nov 2, 2018 Full Review Jessica de Grazia Time Out One of the best of Altman's early movies, using classic themes -- the ill-fated love of gambler and whore, the gunman who dies by the gun, the contest between little man and big business -- to produce a non-heroic Western. Aug 9, 2016 Full Review Paul D. Zimmerman Newsweek A fitfully fascinating failure. Nov 1, 2007 Full Review Roger Moore Movie Nation Beatty is in rare form, blustery and bluff...But you can see why this downbeat, against-the-traditional-grain Western bombed at the time...his can feel like “Paint Your Wagon��� without the cast doing the singing. Rated: 3/4 Jul 29, 2024 Full Review Matt Brunson Film Frenzy Here's a revisionist Western that strips the genre bare: Instead of gallant heroes and beautifully choreographed gunfights, there are only stupid men and sloppy shootouts, nothing worth turning into the stuff of legend. Rated: 3.5/4 Feb 10, 2024 Full Review Noah Gittell Washington City Paper The story moves so briskly to its inexorable conclusion that it’s easy to miss how little actually happens in McCabe and Mrs. Miller, but we’re here for the mood more than the matter. Aug 5, 2023 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (579) audience reviews
Peter L McCabe lights a cigar, then crosses a bridge to lead the audience into both a surreal and realistic work, a visual masterpiece whose characters chill and enchant like falling snow. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 06/03/24 Full Review Carlo L Should be archetype of "western" movies Rated 5 out of 5 stars 09/10/23 Full Review DanTheMan 2 Robert Altman's McCabe & Mrs. Miller is the kind of revisionist post-western only made possible due to the ongoing Vietnam War and newfound American pessimism which led to the disappearance of the much-loved and adored classic American western. Altman dubs it an "anti-western" due to it often doing precisely the opposite of what the genre would lead you to expect, as it moves from the sprawling American Frontier to societies' quieter edges involving tired and obsolete men rather than heroic gunslingers. There are no heroes in McCabe & Mrs Miller only feared and flawed characters, the uneven slow pace is really the only criticism I could lobby at the movie which often stretches its scenes out for as long as possible. However, it's the personified pipe dream of a film, a fleeting, almost translucent, vision of what frontier life might have been and with its haunting use of Leonard Cohen songs, McCabe & Mrs. Miller brilliantly deglamorises and revitalises the most American of genres. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 08/29/23 Full Review Gordon H Perhaps the best cinematic movie ever made. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 07/28/23 Full Review David K I first saw this film around the time it was released. I was a youngster, just out of high school, tumbling towards a college life. It just didn't work for me. Years later, now in my mid-60's, I revisited it. What a difference 50 +/- years can make. There's simply nothing about this movie that conforms to the John Ford westerns I'd grown up with. In retrospect, that was what was so off-putting in my youth. It rains consistently. The streets and lives are full of mud. There is no hero. The buildings are a work-in-progress. No law. No doctors. The whores are not beautiful; they're deeply scarred, with only Julie Christie having anything on the ball. Yet, she lives a secret life full of opium highs. There is a reality to this film that would never have sold in the mythological West that arose in the very beginnings of film. A seismic shift, really. And, a film well worth your time. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 05/24/23 Full Review David L Lots of greed, stupidity, and selfishness on display in a bleak cold landscape. Julie Christie really spices up the look of an opium den customer, though. Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 03/01/23 Full Review Read all reviews
McCabe & Mrs. Miller

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Movie Info

Synopsis Charismatic gambler John McCabe (Warren Beatty) arrives in a mining community and decides to open a brothel. The local residents are impressed by his confident demeanor and fast talk, but crafty prostitute Constance Miller (Julie Christie) sees through McCabe's words and realizes he isn't as sharp as he seems. For a share in his profits, Mrs. Miller agrees to help plan and run McCabe's establishment, but soon a powerful company threatens to destroy what they have built up.
Director
Robert Altman
Producer
Mitchell Brower, David Foster
Screenwriter
Robert Altman, Warren Beatty, Brian McKay, Edmund Naughton
Distributor
Warner Bros.
Production Co
Warner Brothers
Rating
R
Genre
Western
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Jun 24, 1971, Wide
Release Date (Streaming)
Jun 22, 2015
Runtime
2h 1m
Sound Mix
Mono
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