|
|||||||||||||
| Mark Watson | Doorman | |
| Christopher Walken | Carlo Bartolucci | |
| Denis Leary | Lono Veccio | |
| Nina Siemaszko | Jennifer | |
| Jay Della | Bartender | |
| Henry Thomas | Avery Chasten | |
| Sean Patrick Flanery | Max Minot | |
| Nathan Dana Aldrich | Marcus | |
| Jay Mohr | Brett Cambell | |
| Jeremy Sisto | T. K. | |
| Frank Medrano | Heckle | |
| Brad Garrett | Jeckyll | |
| James Peter 'JP' O'Fallon Jr. | Kid #1 | |
| Nicholas Huttloff | Kid #2 | |
| Trent Bross | Maitre D' |
| Director |
|
||
| Producer |
Charles A. Chiara
Stephen Drimmer |
||
| Writer |
Josh McKinney
Gina Goldman |
||
| Cinematography |
Christopher Baffa
|
||
| Musician |
Graeme Revell
|
|
|
Suave gangster Charlie Barrett (Christopher Walken) meets four young men who have taken over his regular booth at a popular bistro. Charmed by the swaggering kids, he agrees to take a ride with them, but they give him a sedative and he awakens in a deserted mansion, taped to a chair with one of his fingers missing. One of his abductors, Avery (Henry Thomas), says that he has a sister who has been |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||