First released in 2019 and funded by an Indiegogo campaign, The Reliant is the epitome of a late-era Eric Roberts film.
Roberts appears towards the beginning of the film. He gets roughly 45 seconds of screen time. He delivers three lines, all in close-up. His character is named Mr. Johnson but, to know that, you have to sit through the entire film so that you can track down his name in the end credits. We don’t know anything about his character, other than he’s a hardware store owner. We don’t know anything about his fate. When last seen, his store is being overrun by a bunch of Antifa goons. It’s not looking good for Mr. Johnson but luckily, he has a lot of weapons.
Kevin Sorbo is also in the film. His role is slight larger. He only gets maybe 16 minutes worth of screentime. His character is killed off fairly early but he does get to appear in a few flashbacks and a fantasy sequence. He plays a father who has taught his children how to shoot guns and survive in case society breaks down. Society does break down and he dies while defending his family. He probably would have survived if his liberal daughter Sophie (Mollee Gray) hadn’t hid the key to the gun safe. Sophie (boo!) doesn’t believe in the Second Amendment and doesn’t like it when her father goes shooting. Not even the sight of hundreds of angry rioters getting ready to open fire on her house can change Sophie’s mind. Boo, Sophie, boo!
Sophie doesn’t believe in killing, even if self-defense. (I don’t believe in killing either. That said, if someone’s coming at you with a gun, you have every right to defend yourself.) When she finds out that her fiancé, Adam (Josh Murray), has had to kill people while she and her siblings were hiding out in the woods, Sophie throws a fit and says that she doesn’t even want Adam — who can barely walk due to an injury — staying at her family’s camp. Sophie is a …. well, I swore off profanity for Lent.
Sophie and her family are being stalked by Jack (Brian Bosworth), an angry man who has a personal grudge against them. Along with Roberts and Sorbo, Bosworth is the other “name” in this movie and he actually does get substantial screentime. And he actually gives a good performance as well, certainly the best in this film.
The Reliant is a technically well-made film and some of the action sequences are surprisingly effective. Unfortunately, whenever the characters are arguing about faith and whether or not guns cen be a useful tool, the movie becomes painfully draggy. The Reliant is occasionally fun in a “I’m going to show this to the most annoying leftie I know and watch them get offended” sort of way. But, for the most part, it’s just too talky and slow for its own good.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
- Star 80 (1983)
- Runaway Train (1985)
- Blood Red (1989)
- The Ambulance (1990)
- The Lost Capone (1990)
- Love, Cheat, & Steal (1993)
- Voyage (1993)
- Love Is A Gun (1994)
- Sensation (1994)
- Dark Angel (1996)
- Doctor Who (1996)
- Most Wanted (1997)
- Mercy Streets (2000)
- Wolves of Wall Street (2002)
- Mr. Brightside (2004)
- Six: The Mark Unleased (2004)
- Hey You (2006)
- Amazing Race (2009)
- In The Blink of an Eye (2009)
- Enemies Among Us (2010)
- The Expendables (2010)
- Sharktopus (2010)
- The Dead Want Women (2012)
- Deadline (2012)
- The Mark (2012)
- Miss Atomic Bomb (2012)
- Bonnie And Clyde: Justified (2013)
- Lovelace (2013)
- The Mark: Redemption (2013)
- Self-Storage (2013)
- A Talking Cat!?! (2013)
- This Is Our Time (2013)
- Inherent Vice (2014)
- Road to the Open (2014)
- Rumors of War (2014)
- Amityville Death House (2015)
- A Fatal Obsession (2015)
- Stalked By My Doctor (2015)
- Enemy Within (2016)
- Joker’s Poltergeist (2016)
- Prayer Never Fails (2016)
- Stalked By My Doctor: The Return (2016)
- The Wrong Roommate (2016)
- Dark Image (2017)
- Black Wake (2018)
- Frank and Ava (2018)
- Stalked By My Doctor: Patient’s Revenge (2018)
- Clinton Island (2019)
- Monster Island (2019)
- The Savant (2019)
- Seven Deadly Sins (2019)
- Stalked By My Doctor: A Sleepwalker’s Nightmare (2019)
- The Wrong Mommy (2019)
- Exodus of a Prodigal Son (2020)
- Free Lunch Express (2020)
- Her Deadly Groom (2020)
- Top Gunner (2020)
- Deadly Nightshade (2021)
- The Elevator (2021)
- Just What The Doctor Ordered (2021)
- Killer Advice (2021)
- The Poltergeist Diaries (2021)
- The Rebels of PT-218 (2021)
- A Town Called Parable (2021)
- Bleach (2022)
- My Dinner With Eric (2022)
- Aftermath (2024)
- The Wrong Life Coach (2024)
- When It Rains In L.A. (2025)
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Beyond The Trophy (dir by Daniel J. Gillin) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Devil’s Knight (dir by Adam Werth) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 3/31/25 — 4/6/25 | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Night Night (dir by Niki Koss) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Las Vegas Story (dir by Byron Q) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Deadly Sanctuary (dir by Nancy Criss) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Assault on Wall Street (dir by Uwe Boll) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: Music Video of the Day: We Belong Together (2005, dir by Brett Ratner) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Best of the Best (dir by Bob Radler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Best of the Best II (dir by Bob Radler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Strange Frequency (dir by Mary Lambert and Bryan Spicer) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Doc Holliday’s Revenge (dir by David DeCoteau) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Dawn (dir by Nicholas Ryan) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: The Demonic Dead (dir by Rick Vargas) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: Sink Hole (dir by Scott Wheeler) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: The Rideshare Killer (dir by Ashley Scott Meyers) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Collection: To Heal A Nation (dir by Michael Pressman) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: Sorority Slaughterhouse (dir by David DeCoteau) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: 2 Bedroom 1 Bath (dir by Stanley Yung) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: Space Sharks (dir by Dustin Ferguson) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: October True Crime: The Company We Keep (dir by Jeff Edelstein) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: October Positivity: Revelation Road: The Beginning of the End (dir by Gabriel Sabloff) | Through the Shattered Lens
Pingback: The Eric Roberts Horror Collection: 616 Wilford Lane (dir by Dante Yore) | Through the Shattered Lens