
Edward Furlong
Jimmy Cuervo / The Crow
Tara Reid
Lola Byrne
David Boreanaz
Luc Crash / Death / Satan
Emmanuelle Chriqui
Lilly
Dennis Hopper
El Niño
Marcus Chong
War
Tito Ortiz
Famine
Yuji Okumoto
Pestilence
Dave Baez
Tanner
Rena Owen
Mary
Danny Trejo
Harold
Macy Gray
Cara Mia
Rosemberg Salgado
The Priest
Ryan Smith
Native Teen
Daymond John
Proud Foot Joe
Richard Cumba
Moses
Ashley Christensen
Waitress #2
David Lea
Bartender
Jorge Jimenez
Cortez
Gill Medina
Tribal Council #1
Marty Fresca
Tribal Council #2
Vanessa Sorensen
Cat Girl #1
Liz Katz
Cat Girl #2
Candace Rea
Cat Girl #3
Erin Balentine
Cat Girl #4
Released
en
$8,000,000.00
- #martial arts
- #superhero
- #supernatural
- #black magic
- #redemption
- #crow
- #based on comic
- #sequel
- #revenge
- #vigilante
- #tragic hero
- #back from the dead
- #sadist
- #gothic
- #urban setting
- #eye gouging
- #scorpion
- #satanic cult
- #righteous rage
- #neo-noir
- #urban gothic
- #supernatural power
- #vigilante justice
- #good versus evil
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Reviews

So ridiculous that it's kinda watchable. <em>'The Crow: Wicked Prayer'</em> is not a good movie. However, it commits so hard to what it wants to do that I was kinda locked on to just see where it would go next. It particularly goes off the rails towards the conclusion, especially with David Boreanaz's Luc. There are many, many issues with this 2005 release, but I honestly didn't hate viewing it
Sooner rather than later every franchise ends up, by design or accident, a parody of itself; The Crow: Wicked Prayer never stood a chance of avoiding this fate, but then what movie starring Eddie Furlong, David Boreanaz, Tara Reid, and Danny Trejo would? On the other hand, we have Dennis Hopper as a pimp named El Nino who says things like "You stole daddy's car keys, but you can't handle the horse












