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Shot Caller (2017)

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Shot Caller (2017)

  • Release Date: 2017-07-13
  • Runtime: 121 minutes
  • Director: Ric Roman Waugh
  • Producers: Gary Michael Walters, Ric Roman Waugh, Jonathan King, Michel Litvak

Shot Caller (2017)

A Brutal, Riveting Story of Survival

A Review

Read Time: 3 min read

Rating: 4 out of 5.

This film is a masterclass in character transformation, showing the strength and weaknesses of the human mind when pushed to its limits. Shot Caller isn’t just about crime—it’s about sacrifice, survival, and the choices we make for those we love.

It’s a movie that blew me away, and honestly, it’s one of the best films I’ve seen this year.

The film follows Jacob Harlon (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau), a successful businessman with a perfect life—a great job, a loving wife, and a son named Joshua. He isn’t caught up in crime, he isn’t in financial trouble, and he has everything to lose.

But one mistake changes everything.

After a night out with friends, Jacob makes a split-second distracted driving mistake that results in the death of his best friend, Tom. He survives, but the consequences are brutal. Given the choice between:

  1. Fighting the charge in court, risking 7 years in prison if he loses.
  2. Pleading guilty for a 16-month sentence in a California prison.

He takes the shorter sentence, but it comes at a cost far greater than he ever imagined.


The prison system isn’t about justice—it’s about power. Jacob quickly learns that being alone is a death sentence. He has no choice but to adapt, and that means joining a gang for protection.

His initiation comes when he fights a black inmate in the yard, proving he’s not weak. This moment isn’t just about violence—it’s about survival instinct taking over. He’s watched by Shotgun (Jon Bernthal), who recruits him into the Aryan Brotherhood.

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From this moment on, Jacob is no longer himself. He earns the gang name “Money”, and each act of violence pulls him deeper into the criminal world.

This is where the real tragedy of the film sets in: Jacob isn’t a criminal, but prison makes him one.

We meet The Beast (Holt McCallany), a shadowy figure who rules the gang from behind bars. No one crosses him, no one disobeys him, and most importantly—no one gets out.

Even when Jacob serves his time and is released, he quickly learns that his past follows him. The Beast doesn’t care that he’s out—he’s still part of the gang. And the moment Jacob thinks about leaving, The Beast makes a fatal mistakehe threatens Jacob’s family.

That’s when Jacob’s transformation is complete.

Jacob is a man who never wanted this life. He doesn’t care about money, drugs, or power. He only cares about his family. But to keep them safe, he embraces his new reality.

The film brilliantly explores identity—how a person can become someone they never intended to be. Jacob isn’t the same man he was before prison. He has been remade, not by choice, but by necessity.

This film was criminally underrated.

  • Nikolaj Coster-Waldau delivers a phenomenal performance, completely shedding his Game of Thrones persona.
  • Jon Bernthal is intense, as always, but his character’s motivations could have been fleshed out more.
  • Holt McCallany’s Beast is terrifying, a villain who rules with quiet authority.
  • The cinematography is beautiful, especially in how it contrasts Jacob’s past and present.
  • The tension never lets up, keeping you invested in every decision Jacob makes.

If you’re in the mood for a raw, emotional, and incredibly well-made crime thriller, Shot Caller is a must-watch.

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Amazon VideoAmazon Video
Apple TVApple TV
Google Play MoviesGoogle Play Movies
YouTubeYouTube
Fandango At HomeFandango At Home
Microsoft StoreMicrosoft Store
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