In 1969, four strangers arrive at the El Royale Hotel. Catholic priest Daniel Flynn, singer Darlene Sweet, salesman Laramie Seymour Sullivan, and sarcastic Emily Summerspring meet the hotel's only employee, Miles Miller. As the guests settle in, secrets are revealed and tensions rise. Priests turn out to be robbers, FBI agents are undercover, and hidden passageways with surveillance equipment are discovered. A kidnapping, murder, and a sadistic cult leader add to the chaos. Ultimately, the survivors must fight for their lives and confront their guilt and past actions.
Kidnapping Mr. Heineken is based on the true crime story of the abduction of beer tycoon Freddy Heineken in the 1980s. A group of criminals kidnaps Heineken and demands a ransom, but their plan begins to fall apart as tensions rise and police surveillance closes in on them. Will they be able to escape the consequences of their kidnapping?
Harvey Keitel plays Penfield Gruber, a once great scientist, reduced to managing a sleazy hotel. Gruber monitors the daily comings and goings of his tenants, mainly for his own interest, until underworld figures ask him to spy on a suspected double-crosser. While watching the man, Gruber overhears a murder plot.
A federal agent recruits a computer whiz to try to free a Mafia witness who has been kidnapped and held in a heavily fortified compound.
A former Navy man attempts to redeem his honor by exposing a shipping tycoon's dealings with the enemy.
In Shoot to Kill, a newspaper reporter is framed for murder and must go on the run to clear his name. As he delves deeper into the case, he uncovers a web of corruption involving a crooked lawyer, a dominant woman, and a criminal organization. With the help of a secretary and a prosecutor, he must navigate the treacherous world of crime and deceit to uncover the truth and bring the real killers to justice.
In 1960s East Berlin, a German scientist decides to defect to the West, leading to a dangerous and thrilling journey involving espionage, illegal border crossings, and a hunt by the secret police.
For more than a year in the early 1980s, police at Scotland Yard watched the build-up of a potentially massive threat to the stability of British society – a flood of the most perfect counterfeit currency ever produced. Unchecked, the tide of fake money could have destabilized the economy, the Bank of England and even the Government.
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