Reasonable Doubt (Blu-ray, Includes Digital Copy, UltraViolet) R
Proof is the Burden
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Also released as:
Reasonable Doubt
for $12.40
Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Encoding: Region A
- Released: March 18, 2014
- Originally Released: 2014
- Label: Lions Gate
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Directed by | Peter P. Croudins | |
Director of Photography: | Brian Pearson |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: C --
It moves fast (a rare quality for a contemporary thriller), but doesn't end up going anywhere interesting.
Full Review
AV Club
Rating: 1/4 --
You may feel as if you're watching two or three abbreviated episodes of Law & Order in quick succession rather than a fully realized movie.
Full Review
Slant Magazine
Rating: 2.5/4 --
Cooper and Jackson never really develop as characters, and the film hurtles towards a pat, violent conclusion.
Full Review
Newark Star-Ledger
Had Mr. Croudins focused more on Mitch's desire to distance himself from a wrong-side-of-the-tracks upbringing - and less on ticking genre boxes - his movie could only have been the better for it.
Full Review
New York Times
Rating: 3/10 --
There's no doubt in my mind that this dull, preposterous mess will be gone from my memory by this time tomorrow night.
Full Review
We Got This Covered
Contrived and predictable yet fairly tense ...
Full Review
Los Angeles Times
But bottom line -- there is no doubt about Reasonable Doubt -- it grabs your attention and holds on until the final verdict is in.
Full Review
Behind The Lens
Product Description:
A hotshot district attorney finds himself at the mercy of a cunning serial killer in this twisting crime thriller starring Dominic Cooper and Samuel L. Jackson. Ambitious DA Mitch Brockden (Cooper) is on the fast track to success when, driving home one frigid winter night, he accidentally runs down a man who dashes into the street. In a panic, Brockden flees the scene. Meanwhile, accused criminal Clinton Davis (Jackson) faces 20 years to life after being found with the body. When the case goes to trial, Brockden's nagging conscience drives him to acquit Davis, who has claimed innocence from the very beginning. But mounting evidence indicates that Davis may still harbor a dark secret, and when Brockden uncovers that secret he finds his life turned upside down, and his family in mortal danger.