Movies Starring Marshall Manesh
Extract
Jason Bateman, Mila Kunis, Ben Affleck, Lidia Porto, Brent Briscoe, Kevin Chamberlin, Clifton Collins Jr., Sam Crystal, David Koechner, Marshall Manesh, Dustin Milligan, Matt Schulze, J.K. Simmons, Nick Thune, Beth Grant
DIRECTOR:Joel, the owner of an Extract plant, tries to contend with myriad personal and professional problems, such as his potentially unfaithful wife and employees who want to take advantage of him.
Crossing Over
Harrison Ford, Sean Penn, Ray Liotta, Ashley Judd, Lee Horsley, Summer Bishil, Cliff Curtis, Jaysha Patel, Alice Eve, Alice Braga, Merik Tadros, Melody Khazae, Justin Chon, Marshall Manesh, Tim Chiou
DIRECTOR:Crossing Over is a multi-character canvas about immigrants of different nationalities struggling to achieve legal status in Los Angeles. The film deals with the border, document fraud, the asylum and green card process, work-site enforcement, naturalization, the office of counter terrorism and the clash of cultures.
Point of Origin
When fire becomes an obsession... truth becomes stranger than fiction.
Ray Liotta, John Leguizamo, Colm Feore, Cliff Curtis, Ling Bai, Illeana Douglas, Ronny Cox, Trent Gill, Ingrid Rubio, Ryan B. Adams, Graham Beckel, Mike Camello, Joe Colligan, Shashawnee Hall, Marshall Manesh
DIRECTOR:Newton Thomas Sigel
Based on a true story, this twisting psychological thriller focuses on a serial arsonist whose terrifying six-year crime spree is juxtaposed with the increasingly desperate efforts of investigators to bring him to justice. Charged with investigating many of these fires is Captain John Orr (Ray Liotta), a legendary figure in the Glendale Fire Department, possessed with an uncanny ability to pinpoint the origins of a fire, as well as the devices by which an arsonist may have carried out the crime. Through a fingerprint left at the scene of one crime and a series of surprise revelations focusing on arsons set in several towns, the task force is able to close in on an unlikely suspect. . . and ultimately crack the case.
Showtime
Lights. Camera. Aggravation.
Robert De Niro, Eddie Murphy, Rachael Harris, Zaid Farid, Alex Borstein, Holly Mandel, Marshall Manesh, Nestor Serrano, T.J. Cross, James Roday, Joel Hurt Jones, Chris Harrison, Perri Peltz, Amy Powell, Mos Def
DIRECTOR:LAPD Detective Sergeant Mitch Preston cares only about doing his job and nailing crooks. LAPD Patrol Officer Trey Sellars joined the force as a day job until his acting career took off. During an undercover drug buy Mitch was working that Trey botched by calling in for backup and drawing media attention, Mitch's partner is shot with a very exotic 12-gauge automatic weapon; Mitch then shoots the video camera out of the hands of a reporter filming the action when the cameraman refused to shut it down. Faced with a $10 million lawsuit, the department agrees to let producer Chase Renzi film Mitch's investigation for a new reality TV show, and constantly tries to make everything more "viewer friendly" by changing everything about Mitch's life to fit the stereotypical view of police officers—and partners him with Trey.
Supreme Sanction
Trained To Kill. Marked For Death.
Michael Madsen, Kristy Swanson, David Dukes, Ron Perlman, Tommy 'Tiny' Lister, Al Sapienza, Suanne Spoke, Donald Faison, Holliston Coleman, Teo, Dannon Green, D.J. Berg, Marshall Manesh, Phil Hawn, Aliza Washabaugh
DIRECTOR:A newspaper reporter (David Dukes) is marked for assassination for his investigation into what happened to some army helicopters that were mysteriously shot down. However, the assassin (Kristy Swanson) cannot pull the trigger when she sees him with his daughter. She then teams up with him to fight the mercenaries (led by Michael Madsen) that are after him. Ron Perlman is the head of the whole organization behind the master plot.
True Lies
When he said I do, he never said what he did.
Bill Paxton, Charlton Heston, Eliza Dushku, Tom Arnold, Art Malik, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jamie Lee Curtis, Tia Carrere, Grant Heslov, Marshall Manesh, Dieter Rauter, Jane Morris, Katsy Chappell, Crystina Wyler, Ofer Samra
DIRECTORS:James Cameron, James Allen
Special agent Harry Tasker gets out of the water outside a heavily guarded mansion, takes off his wetsuit, and there is a dinner jacket underneath. Harry strolls into a swanky party. Harry meets with Juno Skinner, steals some computer files, and escapes in a blaze of gunfire. He's picked up by his partner, Albert "Gib" Gibson, and they return to the United States. Harry goes home to his wife Helen. Helen doesn't know what Harry does because he pretends to be a computer salesman. Their 14-year-old daughter Dana is a sullen teenager, and Helen is so bored by the routine of her life that she's on the verge of having an affair with used-car salesman Simon, who claims to be a spy. Harry is hot on the trail of a group of terrorists led by Salim Abu Aziz. Aziz and his men are smuggling nuclear weapons into the USA in pieces of Persian art, and Aziz plans to hold the country hostage in the name of the Crimson Jihad. Harry's also out to save his marriage when he discovers Helen with Simon, who still claims to be a spy. Harry uses the Agency's resources to give Helen a taste of the real thing. Harry blackmails Helen into seducing an enemy agent — Harry himself — in a hotel room, but their tryst is interrupted by Aziz's men, who kidnap them and take them to one of the Florida Keys, where they're preparing to detonate their nuclear bomb. Harry escapes and rescues Helen, and then they discover that Aziz has gone to Miami and kidnapped Dana. Harry uses a harrier jet to get to Miami, where he sets out to rescue Dana.



