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  1. Riding the Bullet

    Riding the Bullet

    R2005 · Horror · 1h 38m

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  1. Riding the Bullet is a 2004 horror film written, co-produced and directed by Mick Garris. It is an adaptation of Stephen King 's 2000 novella of the same name . The film, which received a limited theatrical release, was not successful in theaters; it earned a domestic gross of $134,711.

  2. Sep 20, 2004 · Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism.

  3. Feb 3, 2005 · With Jonathan Jackson, David Arquette, Cliff Robertson, Barbara Hershey. When a man finds out his mother is dying and tries to hitchhike his way to the hospital, he is picked up by a stranger with a deadly secret.

    • (11K)
    • Horror, Thriller
    • Mick Garris
    • 2005-02-03
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  5. Michael_Elliott 12 October 2012. Riding the Bullet (2004) * 1/2 (out of 4) Stephen King adaptation about troubled teen Alan Parker (Jonathan Jackson) is about to go to a John Lennon concert when he gets word from his neighbor that his mother (Barbara Hershey) has suffered a stroke and is in the hospital.

  6. The supernatural thriller takes place on Halloween in 1969, following 21-year-old New England college student Alan Parker (Jonathan Jackson). Distraught that his girlfriend (Erika Christensen) has broken up with him, he attempts suicide but fails and then learns that his beloved mother (Barbara Hershey) has had a stroke.

    • Mick Garris
    • Erika Christensen
  7. Oct 15, 2004 · Watchlist. Ever since his father passed away, art student Alan Parker (Jonathan Jackson) has been hypnotized by thoughts of death. After his girlfriend, Jessica (Erika Christensen), breaks up with...

    • (22)
    • Horror, Mystery & Thriller
    • R
  8. Oct 15, 2004 · L.A. Weekly. Writer-director Mick Garris has a real feeling for the horror master's melancholy worldview - love is loss - but he's too reverent toward the original story, the ending of which, both on the page and, now, on the screen, lands with an overly elegiac thud. Read More.

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