Movies Starring Ron Causey
Total movies found: 6, viewing from 1 to 6
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Street Kings: Motor City
[ 2011, USA ] starting from $1.99Actors: Ray Liotta, Linda Boston, Ele Bardha, Ron Causey, Kevin Chapman, John P. Chittick, Stephanie Cotton, Tim Craiger, John Dezsi, Tia Fletcher, Shawn Hatosy, Steven Hauptman, Jairus Devon Hill, Sidi Henderson, Julia Ho, Tiren Jhames, Isaac remy Laurent, Inbar Lavi, Jason W. Lee, Dervis Lici, Joshua McCarthy, Noli McCool, Gordon Michaels, Jack Moore, Scott Norman, Clifton Powell, Victor Pytko, Ralph A. Recchia, Charlotte Ross, Lisa Lauren Smith, Zach Stewart, Joe Tinpan, Corey Emanuel Wilson, Otis Youngsmith, Tim Holmes, Morris Lee Sullivan, Amanda Wright
Directors: Chris Fisher
Ray Liotta delivers an intense, electrifying performance in this explosive follow-up to the gritty urban crime thriller Street Kings. Liotta plays Detroit detective Marty Kingston, the leader of an undercover narcotics team, whose members are being systematically murdered one by one. To solve the brutal killings, Kingston joins forces with a cocky, young homicide detective. But neither of them is prepared for the shocking corruption their investigation will uncover — stunning secrets that will set both men on a violent collision course with betrayal and vengeance.
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Kill the Irishman
[ 2011, USA ] starting from $1.99Actors: Val Kilmer, Linda Cardellini, Christopher Walken, Ray Stevenson, Laura Ramsey, Vincent D'Onofrio, Vinnie Jones, Paul Sorvino, Robert Davi, Bob Gunton, Jeff Chase, Fionnula Flanagan, Steve Schirripa, Mike Starr, Cody Christian, Jason Butler Harner, Tony Lo Bianco, Marcus Thomas, Vinny Vella, Jeff Wolfe, Lise Lacasse, Arthur Cartwright, Brian Balzerini, Banzai Vitale, Jimmy Doom, Sharon McHenryPower, John Hawkinson, John P. Chittick, Richard Jewell, Pamela Croydon, Paul Joyner, Patrick Potochick, Danielle Zilafro, Vincent Angelini, Don Cochran, John Duffey Leo, Anna Badalamenti, Sean O'Reilly, Frankie Potochick, Nicole Diorio, Scott Boeneman, Luke Stanaway-Neblo, Jessii Raymond, Michael Marx, Ron Causey, Max Bassett, Trevor Callaghan, Patrick Caporuscio, Bill Lumbert, Alisa Martin, Debra Port, Victor Pytko, Sean Rogers, Zach Stewart, Morris Lee Sullivan, Nikolas Zilafro
Directors: Jonathan Hensleigh
Based on author Rick Porrello's book To Kill the Irishman: The War that Crippled the Mafia, director Jonathan Hensleigh's richly detailed biopic details the rise and fall of notorious Cleveland union rep Danny Greene (Ray Stevenson), who earned notoriety in the mid-'70s for his bold willingness to defy the Italian mob. Raised on the mean streets of Cleveland, Greene's tough reputation eventually lands him a contact with the local mob. Before long, the scrappy local has become a mafia enforcer, but after forming an alliance with notorious gangster John Nardi (Vincent D'Onofrio) and burning feared loan shark Shondor Birns (Christopher Walken), Greene starts to discover that he has the potential to become as powerful as any of his adversaries. Later, Greene develops a reputation as untouchable after surviving numerous assassination attempts, and dealing a devastating blow to organized-crime syndicates across the U.S. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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Trust
[ 2010, USA ] starting from $1.99Genres: Drama
Actors: Catherine Keener, Clive Owen, Jason Clarke, Viola Davis, Noah Emmerich, Liana Liberato, Brandon Molale, Chris Henry Coffey, Jordan Trovillion, Nicole Forester, Noah Crawford, Zach Stewart, Sarab Kamoo, Gordon Michaels, Garrett Ryan, Laura Niemi, Milica Govich, Spencer Curnutt, Tristan Peach, Inga R. Wilson, Robert Axelrod, Zanny Laird, Ron Causey, Jacqueline Forton, Lise Lacasse, Sean Rogers, Jennifer Kincer, Aislinn DeButch, Kelli Jo Sweeney, Larry C. Fenn, Giles Key, Dylan Reichstadt, Joshua Ray Bell, Wallace Bridges, Yolanda Mendoza, Jojuan Westmoreland, Dennis Budziszewski, Olivia Wickline, Kyle Clarington, Nathan Zylich, Lisa Gaulzetti, Max Bassett, Nicole Hansen, Jay Siegel, Frank Maraffino, Samuel Meadows, Adam DeFilippi, David Ross Jr., Mathew Jadan, Martin Malota
Directors: David Schwimmer
A suburban family is torn apart when fourteen-year-old Annie (Liana Liberato) meets her first boyfriend online. After months of communicating via online chat and phone, Annie discovers her friend (Chris Henry Coffey) is not who he originally claimed to be. Shocked into disbelief, her parents (Clive Owen and Catherine Keener) are shattered by their daughter's actions and struggle to support her as she comes to terms with what has happened to her once innocent life. Written by Anonymous
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Stone
[ 2010, USA ] starting from $1.99Some People Tell Lies. Others Live Them.
Actors: Robert De Niro, Edward Norton, Milla Jovovich, Frances Conroy, Enver Gjokaj, Pepper Binkley, Sandra Love Aldridge, Greg Trzaskoma, Rachel Loiselle, Madison Tarnopol, Peter Lewis, Sarab Kamoo, Richard Murphy, Richard Goteri, Ron Lyons, David A. Hendricks, Wayne David Parker, Madeline Loiselle, Linda Boston, Jan Cartwright, Wallace Bridges, James Oscar Lee, Marcus Sailor, Brian Peters, David Strohschein, Jason Waugh, Lamont Bell, John Bostic, Jordyn Thomas, Rory Mallon, Trudy Mason, Sammy A. Publes, Tevis R. Marcum, Jonathan Stanley, Rod McIntosh, Jane Burkey, Connie Cowper, Bonnie Clevering, John 'Punch' Lewis, Chris Nolte, Tobiasz Daszkiewicz, Troy Coulon, Mike Shreeman, Thomas D. Mahard, Kitty Joy Schur, Tom Lowell, Banzai Vitale, Ron Causey, Gary L. Minix, Steven Schoolmeesters
Directors: John Curran
Parole officer Jack Mabry (Robert De Niro) has only a few weeks left before retirement and wishes to finish out the cases he's been assigned. One such case is that of Gerald "Stone" Creeson (Edward Norton), a convicted arsonist who is up for parole. Jack is initially reluctant to indulge Stone in the coarse banter he wishes to pursue and feels little sympathy for the prisoner's pleads for an early release. Seeing little hope in convincing Jack himself, Stone arranges for his wife Lucetta (Milla Jovovich) to seduce the officer, but motives and intentions steadily blur amidst the passions and buried secrets of the corrupted players in this deadly game of deception. Written by The Massie Twins








