
What's the bond between partners, between brothers, and between spouses? In L.A., Bill Holt handcuffs Sean Rickhart inside a rebar frame for a freeway pillar at a construction site; Bill's going to bury Sean in quick-drying cement. Guided by the narration of Nin, Bill's coke-snorting partner, we go back and forth over the past 48 hours to find out what brings Bill and Sean to this deadly scene. Missing money, cops on the take, Sean's two brothers (one the leader of the mob, t... (Full plot summary below)
Enjoy FREE movies and series with your Prime (USA) subscription or when you start a 30-day free trial!
Links compiled using automated software. Availability of offers subject to change / might be region specific / out of date.
Sorry, we can't find any suggestions at the moment.
What's the bond between partners, between brothers, and between spouses? In L.A., Bill Holt handcuffs Sean Rickhart inside a rebar frame for a freeway pillar at a construction site; Bill's going to bury Sean in quick-drying cement. Guided by the narration of Nin, Bill's coke-snorting partner, we go back and forth over the past 48 hours to find out what brings Bill and Sean to this deadly scene. Missing money, cops on the take, Sean's two brothers (one the leader of the mob, the other a camera-carrying simpleton), Bill's wife, dead young police officers, infidelity, and Bill and Nin's partnership make a mix as volatile and unstable as the cement is solid and immobile.
Leave your thoughts about Cement.
| User Reviewjwasu rA mess of a movie that could have been better with the last few minutes lopped off, but I really dug Chris Penn and Jeffrey Wright's performances. ResDogLite. |
| User ReviewTemur N1999? seemed like it was 80's...it's more or less interesting, but a little dragged out, gets kinda boring and you have the feeling "get to the point already". Chris Penn is pretty crazy here and fun. |
| User ReviewJim MThough actor-turned-director Adrian Pasdar's grim expose treats cops and robbers as two sides of the same corrupt coin, nothing in the film is as memorable or biting as cable-TV police dramas. |