Category: Action
All Genres: Action, Comedy, Crime, Thriller
Release Year: 2011
Country: Canada, USA
Runtime: 86
Rating: (0)
Languages: English
Director: Jason Eisener
Sound: Dolby Digital
Taglines:
Writing by: John Davies – &
Jason Eisener – story &
Rob Cotterill – story
John Davies – story
Produced by: Chris Bell – associate producer
Rob Cotterill – producer
Niv Fichman – producer
Paul Gross – producer
Kevin Krikst – associate producer
Andrea Raffaghello – line producer
Frank Siracusa – producer
Cast: Rutger Hauer – Hobo
Pasha Ebrahimi – Bumfight Filmmaker
Robb Wells – Logan (as Rob Wells)
Brian Downey – Drake
Gregory Smith – Slick
Nick Bateman – Ivan / Rip
Drew O'Hara – Otis
Molly Dunsworth – Abby
Jeremy Akerman – Chief of Police
André Haines – Large Man (as Andre Haines)
Agnes M. Laan – Prostitute (as Agnes Laan)
Music: Adam Burke Darius Holbert Russ Howard III
Official Website: Visit Website
Plot Outline:
A homeless vigilante blows away crooked cops, pedophile Santas, and other scumbags with his trusty pump-action shotgun.
Plot: A vigilante homeless man pulls into a new city and finds himself trapped in urban chaos, a city where crime rules and where the city's crime boss reigns. Seeing an urban landscape filled with armed robbers, corrupt cops, abused prostitutes and even a pedophile Santa, the Hobo goes about bringing justice to the city the best way he knows how – with a 20-gauge shotgun. Mayhem ensues when he tries to make things better for the future generation. Street justice will indeed prevail.
Crazy Credits: We know about 1 Crazy Credits. One of them reads:
SPOILER: There's a scene after the closing credits with Samuel L. Jackson.
Goofs: We know about 2 goofs. Here comes one of them:
Revealing mistakes: When the soldier draws the bow, he uses his fingers – no archer would draw a bow like that in such a way because it is so short. He would have used a release aid (a trigger mechanism). When the camera angle shows the soldier from behind, the bow is clearly set up for release aid shooting, not fingers.



