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  1. Random Acts: Directed by Angela Garcia Combs. With Victoria Foyt, James Darren, Larry Manetti, Melody Krell. "Random Acts" is the story of the straw that broke the camels back. Claire, a single mother, just wants to follow a simple dream.

    • (15)
    • Drama
    • Angela Garcia Combs
    • Victoria Foyt, James Darren, Larry Manetti
  2. Claire, a single mother, just wants to follow a simple dream. Simple enough, except didn't she once promise to love honor and cherish another dream? Her ex-husband thinks so and cannot let go even after seven years, until, finally, he entraps her in a random act of violence. But Claire isn't giving up her children.

  3. Aug 2, 2022 · Random Acts of Violence Ending, Explained | Movie Plot Summary. Dhruv Sharma. Updated August 2, 2022. Directed by Jay Baruchel, ‘Random Acts of Violence’ is based on an eponymous one-shot graphic novel series by Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti. As the title suggests, the film is replete with bloodshed and gore.

  4. With Emilie Starr, William Rubio, Mason Branning, Jenna Kim Jones. Mischief with meaning is the name of the game on Random Acts. A team of proficient pranksters goes undercover to make deserving people's dreams come true in unexpected ways while heartwarming hi-jinks are captured on hidden cameras.

    • (82)
    • 2016-04-01
    • Reality-TV
    • 25
  5. Random Acts of Violence is a 2019 slasher film directed and produced by Jay Baruchel, who wrote the screenplay with Jesse Chabot. An adaptation of the 2010 graphic novel, the film follows a comic book creator (portrayed by Jesse Williams) whose works are used as inspiration for a string of real-life murders. Jordana Brewster and Baruchel also star.

  6. Jul 10, 2020 · Comic book creator Todd Walkley (Jesse Williams), his wife Kathy (Jordana Brewster), assistant Aurora (Niamh Wilson) and best friend, Hard Calibre Comics owner Ezra (Jay Baruchel), embark upon a ...

    • 2 min
    • 79.6K
    • Shudder
  7. Aug 20, 2020 · Jay BaruchelsRandom Acts of Violence” is a depressing, cynical slice of nihilism, a movie that thinks it’s saying something about gratuitous violence and exploitation of real tragedy but is even more hypocritically hollow than the films it purports to criticize.