Bruiser (film)

For other uses, see Bruiser (disambiguation).
Bruiser

US DVD cover
Directed by George A. Romero
Produced by Ben Barenholtz
Peter Grunwald
Written by George A. Romero
Starring Jason Flemyng
Peter Stormare
Leslie Hope
Tom Atkins
Music by Donald Rubinstein
Cinematography Adam Swica
Edited by Miume Jan Eramo
Production
company
Le Studio Canal+
Barenholtz Productions
Romero-Grunwald Productions
Distributed by Canal+
Release dates
13 February 2000
Running time
99 min.
Country France
Language English
Spanish
Budget $5 million[1]

Bruiser is a 2000 French horror-thriller film written and directed by George A. Romero and starring Jason Flemyng, Peter Stormare and Leslie Hope.[2]

Bruiser was the first film directed by Romero since the 1993 film The Dark Half.[3] In contrast to his previous films, which were shot in and around Pittsburgh, Bruiser was filmed in Toronto.

Plot

Henry Creedlow is a man who has always tried to fit in society. He keeps his mouth shut, follows the rules, and does what he is supposed to do. But one morning, he wakes up to find his face is gone, and it has been replaced by a white featureless mask. All the years of acquiescence have cost him the one thing he can't replace: his identity; now he's a blank, outside as well as in, an anonymous, featureless phantom. Bent on exacting revenge on those who bullied him, he explodes, deciding that he isn't going to follow the rules anymore.

Cast

  • Jason Flemyng as Henry Creedlow
  • Peter Stormare as Milo Styles
  • Leslie Hope as Rosemary Newley
  • Nina Garbiras as Janine Creedlow
  • Andrew Tarbet as James Larson
  • Tom Atkins as Det. McCleary
  • Jonathan Higgins as Det. Rakowski
  • Jeff Monahan as Tom Burtram
  • Marie Cruz as Number 9
  • Beatriz Pizano as Katie Saldano
  • Tamsin Kelsey as Mariah Breed
  • Kelly King as Gloria Kite
  • Susanne Sutchy as Colleen
  • Balázs Koós as Chester
  • Jean Daigle as Faduah
  • Chris Gillett as Male executive
  • Chantal Quesnel as Rita
  • Jennifer Foster as Carol
  • Boyd Banks as Jester
  • Neil Crone as Boss
  • Ted Ludzik as Gas station attendant
  • Diana Platts as Reporter
  • Kiran Friesen as Lady Godiva
  • Murray Oliver as Cameraman
  • Peter Mensah as Skinhead

  • Neville Edwards as Derelict
  • Yan Feldman as Knife
  • D'Arcy Smith as Uniform
  • Colin Glazer as Police officer
  • Monique Osier as Top Hat
  • Tina Romero as Cleopatra
  • C.J. Fidler as Captive woman
  • Ron Webber as Captive man
  • Kevin Rushton as Drunk attacker
  • Andrew Romero as Little devil
  • Jason Winn 'J.B. Destiny' Bareford as Guitarist
  • Big Poppa Gator as Bouncer
  • Ari Cohen as Caller #1
  • David Lyle as Caller #2
  • David Harcourt as Rigger
  • Ron Van Hart as Football player
  • Bryan Renfro as Train station man
  • Victoria Fodor as Lady in red
  • Melanie as Diogee
  • Dr. Chud as The Misfits
  • Christine Forrest as Birdcage partygoer
  • Michale Graves as The Misfits
  • Jerry Only as The Misfits
  • Michael Stevens as Party robber
  • Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein as The Misfits

Soundtrack

The score was composed by Donald Rubinstein and the soundtrack features the horror punk band The Misfits.[4]

Release

It premiered on 13 February 2000 in Canada and was directly released to DVD in the United States on 9 October 2001.[5]

Reception

Critical reception

Critical reception for Bruiser has been mixed to positive. Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 67%, based on 9reviews, with a rating average of 6/10.[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.