|
Children of the Night (1985)
Character: Pimp (uncredited)
A sociology graduate student researches her doctoral thesis on female crime by interviewing street prostitutes. Shocked by her findings, she offers her own apartment to teenage prostitutes seeking refuge from the streets, many of whom are rejected by their parents and are dependent on their pimps.
|
|
|
Short Fuse (2005)
Character: Big Paul
A suspended boxer runs into all sorts of trouble while trying to go to Las Vegas for his comeback match.
|
|
|
|
|
Jennifer (2012)
Character: Theo
In the near future, a tough job market results in a creative solution for handling dangerous convicted felons.
|
|
|
Salvador (1986)
Character: Landlord San Francisco
In 1980, an American journalist covering the Salvadoran Civil War becomes entangled with both the leftist guerrilla groups and the right-wing military dictatorship while trying to rescue his girlfriend and her children.
|
|
|
Window of Opportunity (2015)
Character: Byron
Window of Opportunity is a suspenseful, darkly comedic thriller about sociopathic corporate executives attempting to cover up the murder of a prostitute. Wall Street vs. Occupy, the 1% vs. the 99%. Produced by John Densmore of The Doors.
|
|
|
Whatever It Takes (2000)
Character: Toothless Carnie
A nerdy teen, Ryan Woodman is smitten with the popular and gorgeous Ashley Grant, who apparently has no interest in him. Meanwhile, dim star athlete Chris Campbell has his eye on Ryan's brainy and beautiful friend, Maggie Carter. The two agree to help each other in their romantic quests, but, as they come closer to their goals, both Ryan and Chris suspect that they might be pursuing the wrong girls.
|
|
|
Angel III: The Final Chapter (1988)
Character: L.A. Pimp
Molly Stewart is now a successful freelance photographer in New York, and after seeing a familiar woman at an art gallery, begins to suspect that she might be her long missing mother. Following her trail to Los Angeles, Molly finds herself in the center of a major crime syndicate who will stop at nothing to execute their diabolical plans.
|
|
|
Tapped Out (2003)
Character: Max Rice
Chart-topping rapper Coolio joins Kelly Jo Minter and Clifton Powell in this action movie about struggling hip-hop artists who discover there's much more to the recording business than making music. There's a down, dirty and deadly side to it that they never dreamed they'd encounter ... and now they have to deal with it.
|
|
|
Going Under (1991)
Character: Quizby
An American submarine races to get a nuclear weapon before a Russian submarine.
|
|
|
Twins (1988)
Character: Mover #2
Julius and Vincent Benedict are the results of an experiment that would allow for the perfect child. Julius was planned and grows to athletic proportions. Vincent is an accident and is somewhat smaller in stature. Vincent is placed in an orphanage while Julius is taken to a south seas island and raised by philosophers. Vincent becomes the ultimate low life and is about to be killed by loan sharks.
|
|
|
Harlem Nights (1989)
Character: Crapshooter
'Sugar' Ray is the owner of an illegal casino and must contend with the pressure of vicious gangsters and corrupt police who want to see him go out of business. In the world of organised crime and police corruption in the 1920s, any dastardly trick is fair.
|
|
|
Con Air (1997)
Character: Blade
Newly-paroled former US Army ranger Cameron Poe is headed back to his wife, but must fly home aboard a prison transport flight dubbed "Jailbird" taking the “worst of the worst” prisoners, a group described as “pure predators”, to a new super-prison. Poe faces impossible odds when the transport plane is skyjacked mid-flight by the most vicious criminals in the country led by the mastermind — genius serial killer Cyrus "The Virus" Grissom, and backed by black militant Diamond Dog and psychopath Billy Bedlam.
|
|
|
CB4 (1993)
Character: 40 Dog
A "rockumentary", covering the rise to fame of MC Gusto, Stab Master Arson, and Dead Mike: members of the rap group "CB4". We soon learn that these three are not what they seem and don't appear to know as much about rap music as they claim... but a lack of musical ability in an artist never hurts sales, does it? You've just got to play the part of a rap star...
|
|