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Release Date: 1999 Cast: James Remar, Jason Behr, Joseph Kell, Brenda James, Thomas G. Waites, Rondell Sheridan, Jaimz Woolvett, Joseph Foss, Andreas Michael Lamelas, Robert Glen Keith, Kenny Cloutier, Marianna Elliott ...MORE
Cast: James Remar, Jason Behr, Joseph Kell, Brenda James, Thomas G. Waites, Rondell Sheridan, Jaimz Woolvett, Joseph Foss, Andreas Michael Lamelas, Robert Glen Keith, Kenny Cloutier, Marianna Elliott, Dean Stockwell ...LESS
Categories: Movies, LGBT, Thriller, Melodrama, Ensemble Film, Family Drama, Psychological thriller, Mystery, Suspense, Crime Thriller Rites of Passage is a 1999 thriller film written and directed by Victor Salva. It stars Dean Stockwell, James Remar, and Jason Behr.
The film begins with two recently escaped convicts — Frank (James Remar) and Red (Jaimz Woolvett) — approach a group of campers. The elder of the pair shoots and kills the campers with single rapidfire shots to the head.
D.J. Farraday (Robert Glen Keith) discovers that his father, Del (Stockwell), has been having an affair. D.J. asks Del to meet him at the family's cabin by the lake, where D.J. intends to confront him about his adultery. When the two... MORE
Rites of Passage is a 1999 thriller film written and directed by Victor Salva. It stars Dean Stockwell, James Remar, and Jason Behr.
The film begins with two recently escaped convicts — Frank (James Remar) and Red (Jaimz Woolvett) — approach a group of campers. The elder of the pair shoots and kills the campers with single rapidfire shots to the head.
D.J. Farraday (Robert Glen Keith) discovers that his father, Del (Stockwell), has been having an affair. D.J. asks Del to meet him at the family's cabin by the lake, where D.J. intends to confront him about his adultery. When the two arrive at the summer house, they find the younger son, Campbell "Cam" Farraday (Behr), already there. Eventually it is revealed that Del had found Cam and his boyfriend, Billy, embracing there at the cabin. Del brutally beat Billy, and father and son have not spoken since. Cam seems determined to leave the confrontational situation. While D.J. is trying to convince Cam to stay and attempt a reconciliation, Cam reveals to him that Billy is dead, and the clear implication is that Cam blames his father for the loss.
A short while later, the two escaped convicts show up at the cabin and ask to use the phone, LESS
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