The Samaritan

The Samaritan
Directed by David Weaver
Produced by James Atherton
Geoffrey Brandt
Mark Horowitz
Andras Hamori
Suzanne Cheriton
Tony Wosk
Screenplay by David Weaver
Elan Mastai
Starring Samuel L. Jackson
Luke Kirby
Ruth Negga
Tom Wilkinson
Gil Bellows
Aaron Poole
Music by Todor Kobakov
Cinematography François Dagenais
Editing by Geoff Ashenhurst
Distributed by H2O Motion Pictures
Country United States
Language English

The Samaritan, currently under the title Lie Down With Darkness, is an upcoming neo-noir thriller written and directed by David Weaver. A trailer was released on its website.[1]

Contents

Plot

After twenty-five years in prison, Foley (Samuel L. Jackson) is finished with the grifter's life. Prison and a lifetime in the game have stripped him of friends, family and a reason to get up in the morning. But when he meets an elusive young woman named Iris (Ruth Negga), the possibility of a new start looks real.

Yet his past is proving to be a stubborn companion: Ethan (Luke Kirby), the son of his former partner, wants to learn the game–and who better to learn from than the closest thing he has to a father? And he has the perfect mark–his boss Xavier (Tom Wilkinson), a brutal man admired in the straight world for his business savvy, and feared in the underworld for his ruthlessness. Xavier is coming to town, and there is an easy $8 million to be had if they know how to play smart.

The play is an old classic con–"The Samaritan"–the inside man, the outside man, the catch and the mark. It is a dangerous and high-risk setup requiring nerves of steel, precision timing and a bit of finesse to make it convincing. Foley could do it in his sleep–if he wanted to. But he does not and he will not. That is until Ethan raises the stakes and plays some cards that Foley never knew were in the deck. He is trapped and the con is on.

Foley finds himself caught up in a nightmare situation and for the first time, with something personal to lose. The mark proves more formidable than Foley anticipated and every unexpected turn could blow the whole thing up, leaving Foley vulnerable, exposed and hopelessly watching everything that matters to him slip through his fingers.

In a good con, nothing is as it seems, and Foley finds out too late that the player has been played.

The only way out is to play the game to the end, and hope they make it out alive.

Cast

Release

The Samaritan is set for a 2012 release.[3]

References

External links