1-48 of 51 photos

Still of Jada Pinkett Smith in Collateral Still of Jada Pinkett Smith and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Still of Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Javier Bardem and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Javier Bardem in Collateral Still of Jada Pinkett Smith and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise in Collateral Still of Michael Mann and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise in Collateral Still of Michael Mann in Collateral Still of Mark Ruffalo in Collateral Still of Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise in Collateral Still of Peter Berg, Paul Adelstein, Bruce McGill and Mark Ruffalo in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise, Michael Mann and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx and Barry Shabaka Henley in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Angela Meryl, Boni Yanagisawa, Jane Oshita, Caryn Mower, Darlene Ava Williams, Liisa Cohen Jada Pinkett Smith at event of Collateral Tom Cruise and Jada Pinkett Smith at event of Collateral Jada Pinkett Smith at event of Collateral Jada Pinkett Smith at event of Collateral Tom Cruise, Michael Mann, Jada Pinkett Smith and Jamie Foxx at event of Collateral Jamie Foxx at event of Collateral Jamie Foxx at event of Collateral Michael Mann at event of Collateral Tom Cruise at event of Collateral Tom Cruise at event of Collateral Still of Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise in Collateral Still of Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx and Barry Shabaka Henley in Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral Collateral

1-48 of 51 photos

View the latest pictures, photos and images from Collateral - LA cabbie Max Durocher is the type of person who can wax poetic about other people's lives, which impresses U.S. Justice Department prosecutor Annie Farrell, one of his fares, so much that she gives him her telephone number at the end of her ride. Although a dedicated man as seen through the efficiency in which he does his work, he can't or won't translate that eloquence into a better life for himself. He deludes himself into believing that his now twelve year cabbie job is temporary and that someday he will own his own limousine service. He even lies to his hospitalized mother that he already owns one, with a further lie that he tells her as such primarily to make her happy, rather than the truth which is that he won't do anything to achieve that dream. One night, Max picks up a well dressed man named Vincent, who asks Max to be his only fare for the evening. For a flat fee of $600...