Catalogue

Bang Bang

Drama
Available on VOD: TBA Q1 2026
Director: Vincent Grashaw
Cast: Tim Blake Nelson (Lincoln, The Incredible Hulk, The Astronaut Farmer, O Brother, Where Art Thou?), Andrew Liner (Vampire Academy), Kevin Corrigan (The Departed, American Gangster), Nina Arianda (Goliath, Greedy People)

Retired pugilist Bernard "Bang Bang" Rozyski (Tim Blake Nelson) is inspired to try his hand at training once he reconnects with his estranged grandson. While their training brings Bang Bang out of the hole he's been living in, everyone questions his motivations, including an ex-girlfriend from decades ago, who was privy to Bang Bang's meteoric rise in the sport in the 80s as well as the rivalry with his former opponent, her cousin and Detroit's Mayoral candidate Darnell Washington. Is Bang Bang merely passing down inherited rage, or is there true altruism behind his tutelage?

Reviews
  • Cinemadailyus.com: Nelson carries the film in an exceptional way that enhances it tremendously.
  • Filminquiry.com: Part boxing movie, part familial drama, Bang Bang is further proof of Vincent Grashaw’s directorial expertise and confirmation that Tim Blake Nelson’s talent has only grown. It’s a patient, raw, and unique story from a stellar team.
  • Theaureview.com: As beautiful as it is bleak, Bang Bang is a healthy reminder of [Tim Blake] Nelson’s status as one of our finest character actors.
  • Screenanarchy.com: Tim Blake Nelson packs a knockout punch as a pugnacious (retired) boxer in director Vincent Grashaw's stirring drama. ... Nelson ... makes you believe every word that he says, every glance that he glares, and every punch that he throws.
  • Filmobsessive.com: Breathing in his character’s metaphoric and reignited cinders right down to his soul, Tim Blake Nelson outdoes himself as a volatile performer in Bang Bang.
  • Awardsradar.com: Bang Bang is a knockout, led by Tim Blake Nelson doing some of his best work to date.

Child of God

Drama, Thriller
Available on VOD: 15 juni 2015
Director: James Franco
Cast: Fallon Goodson (L!fe Happens), Scott Haze (Venom, Jurassic World Dominion, Sound of Freedom), Tim Blake Nelson (Lincoln, The Incredible Hulk, The Astronaut Farmer, O Brother, Where Art Thou?), James Franco (127 Hours, This Is the End, Veronica Mars)

Based on a book by Cormac McCarthy. Set in mountainous Sevier County, Tennessee, Child of God tells the story of Lester Ballard, a dispossessed, violent man whom the narrator describes as "a child of God much like yourself perhaps." Ballard's life is a disastrous attempt to exist outside the social order. Successively deprived of parents and homes and with few other ties, Ballard descends literally and figuratively to the level of a cave dweller as he falls deeper into crime and degradation.

Reviews
  • Variety.com: A galvanizing portrait of social and sexual deviance.
  • FilmThreat.com: Profoundly intense .. [an] incredible and fierce performance.
  • TheGuardian.com: Multi-hyphenate renaissance man James Franco has finally delivered the goods with this great, grisly Cormac McCarthy adaptation. Child of God is a shocking tale of backwoods lunacy and one man's descent into hell.
  • HollywoodReporter.com: A pitch-dark hillbilly fever dream... A character study of a figure said to be partly inspired by Wisconsin murderer and body snatcher Ed Gein (also an influence on the killers in Psycho and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre), the film succeeds on its own terms. That is in large part down to Haze's unstinting commitment to the role.
  • Film-forward.com: In a character actor/star making performance, Scott Haze leads a ferocious cast. Macabre but memorable.
  • Filmleaf.net: A well-made film, dominated by a once-in-a-lifetime, balls-out performance by Scott Haze as Lester Ballard, the crazed outcast, the titular, protagonist "child of God" (testing the range of that concept) who in the course of the story becomes a cave-dweller, murderer, and necrophiliac.
  • Cine-vue.com: Franco (through the excellent Haze) has created a dark portrait of an outcast, lacing it with his own bleak poetry and black humour. 4 out of 5 stars.
  • Rollingstone.com: The film's protagonist is Lester Ballard, played by Scott Haze in a performance that can be described for starters as phenomenal. This is ambitious, challenging filmmaking, elevated by Franco's compassion and Haze's revelatory acting. OK, the film trips up on its attempt to lace tragedy with gallows humor. But Franco is out there trying something, balancing literature and cinema in a tightrope act that is never less than exciting to watch.
Awards
  • Hamptons International Film Festival 2013: Breakthrough Performer - Scott Haze
  • Venice Film Festival 2013: Nominated for Golden Lion.
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