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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cry_Uncle!Cry Uncle! - Wikipedia

    Cry Uncle!, released in the UK as Super Dick (theatrical title) and American Oddballs (video title), is a 1971 American film in the Troma Entertainment library. It is directed by John G. Avildsen and stars Allen Garfield. The story, based on the Michael Brett novel Lie a Little, Die a Little, follows the misadventures of a slobbish private ...

    • August 17, 1971
    • Allen Garfield, Madeleine Le Roux, Devin Goldenberg
  2. Feb 21, 2011 · ORIGINS OF 'CRY UNCLE'. Published Feb. 21, 2011. Why is the wrestling term "cry uncle," and not aunt or anything else? There is no definitive history on the origin of the phrase, though there is ...

  3. Budget. $75 million [2] [3] Box office. $110 million [4] The Man from U.N.C.L.E. is a 2015 spy film directed by Guy Ritchie and written by Ritchie and Lionel Wigram. It is based on the 1964 MGM television series of the same name, which was created by Norman Felton and Sam Rolfe.

    • $75–84 million
    • John Davis, Steve Clark-Hall, Lionel Wigram, Guy Ritchie
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  5. Cry Uncle!, based on the Michael Brett novel, "Lie a Little, Die a Little", follows the misadventures of a fat, hairy slob of a private eye named Jake Masters, who is hired to clear up a phony murder rap. The NYPD is hunting for an eccentric millionaire, Jason Dominic, in connection with the brutal murder of a cocktail waitress named Lucille ...

  6. Interesting facts, additional information and shooting details. Cry Uncle!, released in the UK as Super Dick (theatrical title) and American Oddballs (video title), is a 1971 American film in the Troma Entertainment library. It is directed by John G. Avildsen and …

  7. On a $106,000 budget, the film grossed over $19 million and earned an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay. While working on Joe, Avildsen became friends with a young college graduate named Lloyd Kaufman, who was getting his start. They decided to start working on a film based on Michael Brett’s novel Lie a Little, Die a Little.

  8. Cry Uncle was rated X at the time of its release, but as confirmed by MPAA records, the rating was changed to R in 1973. According to a December 1980 Variety article, Troma Films re-released a new version of the picture that had been "scissored" to receive the less severe R rating.

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