Dead Man Running

5.8
20091h 32m

A loan shark gives ex-con Nick a period of 24 hours in order to pay back the money he owes. Up against it, Nick involves his best mate on a multi-part mission in order to raise the cash before it's too late for them both

Available For Free On

Logo for Plex
Logo for Plex Channel
Logo for Fawesome

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official 2020 Re-Release Trailer

Official 2020 Re-Release Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official UK Trailer

Official UK Trailer

Cast

Photo of 50 Cent

50 Cent

Thigo

Photo of Esmé Bianco

Esmé Bianco

Herself - Featured Burlesque Performer

Photo of Phil Davis

Phil Davis

Johnny Sands

Photo of Omid Djalili

Omid Djalili

Fat Bald Man

Photo of Christopher Ryan

Christopher Ryan

Old Boy Bookie

Photo of Clive Russell

Clive Russell

McClintoch

Photo of Ben Moor

Ben Moor

Middle Aged Man

Photo of Tony Rohr

Tony Rohr

Mr. Jeff

Photo of Garry Cooper

Garry Cooper

Faceless Man

Photo of John Forgeham

John Forgeham

Terry Biggs

Photo of Nicholas Ball

Nicholas Ball

Fight Bookie

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

I can just imagine the scene down the boozer. Danny Dyer and his pal Tamer Hassan are a bit bored and they think - "Hey, let's make another movie. It can be a cheap and cheerful film noir type thing and we can get our mates to join in"... "Great idea - I'll ask Ash, Phil D is probably around and I don't think Brenda is filming "Vera" just now so I'll drop her a text"... Next thing, and a few grand better off from a nearby beetle drive for the budget, off they go to make this. The story? Well, Tamer fancied being "Nick" who owes a loan shark £100k. Unless his debt is paid back pronto, his poor old ma (Brenda Blethyn) will get bumped off by the elderly, prone-to-napping, enforcer that is Phil Daniels. How, though? Well, he partners with best pal "Bing" (Dyer) and go a-fund raising. Can they find the cash and save his wheelchair bound mother? What do you think? Thing about this, though, is that it's not terrible. The acting is one-dimensional and the dialogue is straight out of the "Janet and John book of daft crime thrillers", but there is some humour and charisma to be enjoyed here and it does exactly what is says on the tin. If you set the bar pretty low and go with the flow then you will get pretty much what you expect from this predictable and decently paced ninety minutes of East London drama.

You've reached the end.