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Michael Madsen | Walker | |
Daryl Hannah | Salt | |
Mykelti Williamson | Sampson | |
Mark Boone Junior | Bugsby | |
John Cassini | Travalino | |
Nicholas Lea | Jenkins | |
Aaron Pearl | Chambers | |
Matthew Robert Kelly | Zelco | |
Peter LaCroix | Coburg | |
Emy Aneke | Darius | |
Betty Linde | Mom | |
Justine Warrington | Hooker | |
Martin Cummins | Agent Arnaud | |
Frank Cassini | Agent Linder |
Director |
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Producer | Daryl Hannah
Matthew Robert Kelly |
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Writer | Raul Inglis
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Cinematography | Andrzej Sekula
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Musician | Cliff Martinez
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Vice is a low budget movie where everyone is , corrupt and dying. Like other cop noir, this one begins with a voice-over. Walker (Michael Madsen) stands in a church observing how no one is really alive. We're just all dead or dying. From there we jump to streetwalker sex and then a drug bust gone bad. Soon no one trusts anyone and everyone is a suspect. It's back and forth between the cop shop, a bar and his car. He's like a player caught in an endless video game loop with no way out. The most innocent of the vice cops, Salt (Daryl Hannah) spends most of the movie with her beautiful baby blues covered by black bangs as if she doesn't want to see all the corruption around her. |
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