| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Vincent D'Onofrio | ... | ||
| Eamon Farren | ... | ||
| Evan Bird | ... | ||
| Julia Ormond | ... | ||
| Conor Leslie | ... | ||
| Jake Weber | ... | ||
| Gina Philips | ... | ||
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Daniel Maslany | ... | |
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Benjamin DeWalt | ... |
Son
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Lyndon Bray | ... |
Nasty Father
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Michael Maslany | ... | |
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Kate Herriot | ... |
The Runner
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Alexander Doerksen | ... |
Colin
(as Alex Doerksen)
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Troy Skog | ... |
Bob's Dad
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| Shannon Jardine | ... |
Bob's Mom
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This movie is about A cab driver called Bob (Vincent D'Onofrio) who picks up women and takes them to his house where he kills them. But on this one day he picks up a woman and her 9 year old son Tim. Bob then makes Tim live in the house with him all while he keeps killing women. Tim grows up there, watching, seeing all that happens. Bob wants to make him his protégé. Will Tim carry on the legacy? Written by Michael Hallows Eve
I rented this movie from Redbox and watched it last night with my husband. Loved it! It is one of those movies that marks you and leaves you with questions. The movie is about a boy who was with his mother when a taxicab driver abducted and murdered her. The same taxicab driver takes the boy in, renames him Rabbit. Rabbit learns that trying to outsmart the one who holds him captive does not work and he goes into survival mode, simply working to make it through day to day. The acting of both men was stellar. Even the extras in this movie were amazing actors. But this is a movie that is strong ONLY because of the acting. There aren't any million dollar special effects, amazing backdrops, no fancy CGI, and sorry guys no naked cheerleaders with breasts bared. The story line is not as straight forward as it sounds, as Rabbit and Bob become a twisted sort of family. I think that we all want to believe that such things cannot happen, but the reality is that all too often they do happen. People can be monsters. Some are born and others are made, and this movie makes you question both. Was the man who became a monster made a monster by his past? Was the man who walked away unscathed, maybe even more of a monster than the monster? This movie is still simmering in my mind, and likely will for days to come. Highly recommend this movie, and even an action junkie like me was able to sit through it, and I continued to sit after the movie ended, listening.