Not exact matches
Raylan soon teams up with his long beleaguered boss, Chief Deputy Art Mullen (Nick Searcy), to track down a person who may or may not be involved with Arlo's bag, but again this is mostly a superficial
bait and switch that exists
as a framework to highlight a promising array of new villains: Preacher Billy (Joe Mazzello) and his
wife, Cassie (Lindsay Pulsipher), who may be using a traveling tent show to horn in on Boyd Crowder's (Walton Goggins) enterprises, which enticingly suggests the potential for a showdown that could pointedly play on Boyd's own discarded past
as a hypocritical born - again Christian; Colton Rhodes (Ron Eldard), a former military police operative recruited
as Wade's new right hand; and Randall Kusik (Robert Baker), a brutal bare - knuckle brawler who has a closer relationship to Raylan than he knows.
Like an Oscar
bait E.T., this soft focus drama stars Kevin Spacey
as Prot — either a delusional man stricken with grief at the loss of his
wife and child or an alien from the planet K - PAX who travels the galaxy using light.
Oscar, the man in the wheelchair is played by Peter Coyote,
as a sardonic, self - loathing drunk who frankly holds out the
bait of his
wife as a lure to keep the stranger listening.
As the Jane to Skarsgård's Tarzan, Robbie is anything but a passive wife who sits around, waiting to be saved — even when Christoph Waltz's villainous Leon Rom tries to use her as bait for her husban
As the Jane to Skarsgård's Tarzan, Robbie is anything but a passive
wife who sits around, waiting to be saved — even when Christoph Waltz's villainous Leon Rom tries to use her
as bait for her husban
as bait for her husband.
Here he is a convicted arsonist (and murderer) trying to manipulate a corrections officer (Robert De Niro) into granting him parole by using his casually promiscuous
wife (Milla Jovovich)
as bait in this taut thriller set in the recession decimated suburbs of Detroit and the State Prison of Southern Michigan.