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Nightcrawler

The city shines brightest at night
2014 | 118m | English

(647192 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 11 (history)

Director: Dan Gilroy
Writer: Dan Gilroy
Staring:
Details

When Lou Bloom, desperate for work, muscles into the world of L.A. crime journalism, he blurs the line between observer and participant to become the star of his own story. Aiding him in his effort is Nina, a TV-news veteran.
Release Date: Oct 23, 2014
Director: Dan Gilroy
Writer: Dan Gilroy
Genres: Drama, Crime, Thriller
Keywords psychopath, job interview, sociopath, serial killer, psychological thriller, home invasion, newsreel footage, neo-noir, stringer, news business, ghoulish, underground, journalism, cynicism, murder, crime scene, los angeles, california, stakeout, character study, ethics, police scanner, tense
Production Companies Bold Films, Sierra/Affinity
Box Office Revenue: $47,425,835
Budget: $8,500,000
Updates Updated: Aug 02, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Jake Gyllenhaal Louis Bloom
Riz Ahmed Rick
Rene Russo Nina Romina
Bill Paxton Joe Loder
Kevin Rahm Frank Kruse
Michael Hyatt Detective Frontieri
Price Carson Detective Lieberman
Kent Shocknek Kent Shocknek
Sharon Tay Sharon Tay
Ann Cusack Linda
Carolyn Gilroy Jenny
Marco Rodríguez Scrapyard Owner
Michael Papajohn Security Guard
Jonny Coyne Pawn Shop Owner
Rick Chambers KWLA Anchor Ben Waterman
Pat Harvey Pat Harvey
Rick Garcia Rick Garcia
James Huang Marcus Mayhem Video
Leah Fredkin Female Anchor
Bill Seward Bill Seward
Holly Hannula KWLA Anchor Lisa Mays
Nick Chacon Cop #1
Kevin Dunigan Cop #2
Alex Ortiz Cop #3
Eric Lange Ace Video Cameraman
Kiff VandenHeuvel Editor
Christina De Leon Barred Door Woman
Jamie McShane Freaked Motorist
Dig Wayne Neighbor
Myra Turley Female Neighbor
Merritt Bailey Freelancer
Juan Fernandez Reporter Ron De La Cruz
Lisa Remillard Reporter Deena Rain
Manuel Lujan Technical Director
Chris Wolfe Reporter Joel Beatty
Austin Raishbrook Stringer (uncredited)
Marc Raishbrook Stringer (uncredited)
Dale Shane Paramedic (uncredited)
Kathleen York Jackie (uncredited)
Viviana Chavez Desiree (uncredited)
Stephanie D'Abruzzo Telephone Woman with Gloves (uncredited)
Emily Dahm DUI Girl (uncredited)
Bill Blair Control Room Switcher (uncredited)
Name Job
Dan Gilroy Writer, Director
James Newton Howard Original Music Composer
Robert Elswit Director of Photography
John Gilroy Editor
Mindy Marin Casting
Amy Westcott Costume Design
Donald Mowat Makeup Department Head
Mike Smith Second Unit Director, Stunt Coordinator
Scott Martin Gershin Sound Supervisor, Sound Designer
King Orba Property Master
Richard L. Fox First Assistant Director
Valentine Marvel First Assistant Camera
Erik Stabenau Stunts
Brett Smrz Stunts
Mark Riccardi Stunts
Simon Rhee Stunts
Charlie Picerni Stunts
John C. Meier Stunts
Monique McKellop Stunt Driver
Jalil Jay Lynch Stunts
Joel Lambert Stunts
Pak Ho-Sung Stunts
Oliver Keller Stunts
Samuel Hubinette Stunts
Steve Holladay Stunts
Tom Harper Stunts
Chad Guerrero Stunts
Tim Gilbert Stunts
Lance Gilbert Stunts
Matt Berberi Stunts
Dickey Beer Stunts
Laura Albert Stunts
Jaime FitzSimons Technical Advisor
Carmen Cuba Casting Consultant
James Laxton Additional Photography
Julie Wagner Stand In
Craig Baxley Jr. Stunts
Naaman Marshall Art Direction
Meg Everist Set Decoration
Pavy Olivarez Hairstylist
Malanie J. Romero Makeup Artist, Key Makeup Artist
Melani Petrushkin Art Department Coordinator
Joe Ondrejko Construction Coordinator
Antonio Andraus Leadman
Jennifer Durban Set Decoration Buyer
Andy Malcolm Foley
Michael Kamper Sound Editor
Martyn Zub Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Jessie Pariseau Foley Editor, First Assistant Sound Editor
Elia P. Popov Special Effects Coordinator
Jamison Huber Visual Effects Producer
Connor Meechan Visual Effects Supervisor
J. A. Byerly Rigging Gaffer
Michael Svitak Camera Operator
Chuck Zlotnick Still Photographer
Sean Haley Set Costumer
Rudy Lopez Digital Intermediate
Kevin Hickman First Assistant Editor, VFX Editor
Debra L. Tennant First Assistant Editor
Marty Osborne Picture Car Coordinator
Scott Peterson Script Supervisor
Curtis Collins Location Manager
Mads Hansen Unit Production Manager
Geno Hart Consulting Producer
Frank Salvino Post Production Supervisor
Kara Lipson Casting Associate
Nic Ratner Music Editor, Music Supervisor
Brian Ross Music Supervisor
Betsy Danbury Unit Production Manager
Andrew Rowlands Steadicam Operator, Additional Director of Photography
Shawn Holden Production Sound Mixer
Robert Jackson Boom Operator
Caroline Quiroga Assistant Costume Designer
Robin Roberts Costume Supervisor
Joy Zapata Key Hair Stylist
Viviane Normand Hairstylist
Joe Pancake Special Effects Supervisor
Trent Hara Production Supervisor, Production Coordinator
Samara Kelly Post Production Assistant
Steve Beimler Location Scout
Penelope Franco Gilmore Set Dressing Artist
Matthew Kern Atzenhoffer Set Dressing Artist
Chris Beresford Propmaker
Margit Pfeiffer Supervising ADR Editor, Supervising Dialogue Editor
Julie Feiner Dialogue Editor
Glen Yrigoyen Stunts
James A. Smith Stunts
Monty L. Simons Stunts
Spike Silver Stunts
Dennis Scott Stunts
Stephen W. Schriver Stunts
Tim Sabatino Stunt Driver
Scott Rosen Stunts
Joe Ordaz Stunts
Robert Nagle Stunt Driver
Mehdi Merali Stunts
Eric Matuschek Stunts
Jesse Jacobs Utility Stunts
Terry Jackson Stunts
Chuck 'Chaz' Hosack Stunts
Logan Holladay Stunts
Kiralee Hayashi Stunts
Xavier Clarke Stunt Driver
Mickey Cassidy Stunts
Warren Drummond Storyboard Artist
Simone Farber Second Assistant Director
Keri Bruno Second Assistant Director
David Ticotin First Assistant Director
Steven Finestone Second Unit Director of Photography
Andy Koyama Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Dixie Webster-Davis Casting
Kevin Kavanaugh Production Design
Michael Bauman Gaffer
Jeffrey Stott Executive In Charge Of Production
Candace Neal Hair Department Head
Keith Woulard Stunts
Jimmy N. Roberts Stunt Coordinator
Chic Daniel Stunts
Freddy Bouciegues Stunts
Danny Durr Lighting Technician
Name Title
Jennifer Fox Producer
David Lancaster Producer
Gary Michael Walters Executive Producer
Stephanie Wilcox Co-Producer
Tony Gilroy Producer
Betsy Danbury Executive Producer
Juliana Guedes Associate Producer
Garrick Dion Associate Producer
Jake Gyllenhaal Producer
Michel Litvak Producer
Organization Category Person
SAG Awards Best Actor Jake Gyllenhaal Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 74 109 50
2024 5 75 127 50
2024 6 62 92 46
2024 7 69 139 41
2024 8 68 101 42
2024 9 53 120 40
2024 10 79 140 38
2024 11 57 103 41
2024 12 56 78 41
2025 1 65 105 41
2025 2 47 80 10
2025 3 16 58 5
2025 4 10 12 8
2025 5 10 17 8
2025 6 9 11 7
2025 7 9 12 7
2025 8 9 14 7
2025 9 13 15 11

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 492 744
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2025 8 181 677
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2025 7 243 691
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2025 6 336 743
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2025 5 220 688
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2025 4 246 677
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2025 3 275 672
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2025 2 497 822
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2025 1 473 823
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2024 12 371 712
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 566 814
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 440 789
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 834 886
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 739 892

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Reviews

tmdb39513728
N/A

**Survival of the Batsh!t Craziest** Here we have a sociopath for the digital age. A _Taxi Driver_ for the early 21st Century. Louis Bloom might have been born yesterday, just before taking an online course in Small Business Management, the new way to self-educate, without the petty annoyances of ... human contact and interaction. Every basic lesson he absorbed is put to the test with the obsessive solitary singular purpose of succeeding. Jake Gyllenhaal immerses himself in the role with psychotic stupor. He speaks with the same forward-plotting conviction whether tossing about obvious clichés or revealing something brilliant. The perfect entrepreneur. A maniacal detached idiot savant on a ruthless predatory mission. Morality and the legal system are minor roadblocks to dodge, riddles to resolve, sentiments to overcome. His brand of narcissistic psychosis is a genetic mutation that insures the survival of the species. Like an Aryan bulldozer, he cripples and kills the weak, exploiting the flaws in humanity, cannibalizing the limits of civilization, and capitalizing on each opportunity every step of the way, all for his own personal gain. All while intuiting which backs to scratch and/or stab and when. The perfect entrepreneur. The quintessential post-9/11 movie hero. Where Travis Bickle sought to take down corruption to rescue the innocent, Louis Bloom does the opposite, preying on the fallen and severing the social codes and mores that bind us for his own solitary success. American Exceptionalism. Nightcrawler is nanoeconomics in its purest, most wicked and vicious form. I'm sure some may see it not so much as a comment on what ails us but as an inspiration to venture out from, and Bloom as a persistent determined role model to imitate. How-to-Succeed-in Business-Without-Feeling. Humanity is merely a construct that can be subjugated, an apparatus to dismantle, a child's toy for the child that wants it all.

Jun 23, 2021
mattwilde123
8.0

'Nightcrawler' is a neo noir thriller starring a very impressive (and thin) Jake Gyllenhaal which cleverly satirises the media industry's obsession with horror and violence. The poster's correlation with Nicolas Winding Refn's 'Drive' is a very clear choice because they are very similar in how th ... ey're made in terms of themes and even soundtrack. The film is also very similar to Martin Scorsese's 'Taxi Driver' and David Fincher's 'Seven' as the cinematography is very bleak and dark. The story is disturbingly gripping as the audience view Lou Bloom's rise as an amateur journalist who seems to do anything to get the best footage of horrific crime scenes. What's more shocking are the news channels that purchase his work claiming "if it bleeds, it leads!". Jake Gyllenhaal is brilliant in the starring role as he seems creepy but also powerful and shrewd. ★★★★

Jun 23, 2021
Oldnewbie
N/A

I find it truly amazing that Jake Gyllenhaal did not win nor was even nominated for an Oscar for this stunning performance as Louis Bloom. Makes me wonder how much of who gets nominated and who wins rides on insider politics and not on merit. Or how many Oscar noms and wins are "gifts" in the respec ... t that either an actor has a catalog of wonderful performances and has never won (Henry Fonda comes to mind for "On Golden Pond")or the effort put into as role somehow makes it an Oscar winning performance (Leo DiCaprio in "The Revenant"). Gyllenhaal becomes his character; a feral, single minded, means justify the end "bottom feeder" catering to the worst in humanity - our seemingly built in need to view others pain. He sees nothing at all wrong with what he does or how he goes about it. Easily he is most believable sociopath I have seen on film. In a performance marked by many stand out moments perhaps the most galvanizing one is not an action sequence but a quiet moment (before a storm) where he tells an employee that "Maybe my problem isn't that I don't understand people, but that I don't like them." How his work was over looked for an Oscar is beyond what good acting warrants and indeed must fall within the machinery of Hollywood backroom politics. Going by IMDb, he was nominated for outstanding acting by just about every other award given in entertainment except the Academy. Maybe perhaps his Lou Bloom was too good and looking at this work, for Hollywood, was like looking into the darkest darkness; understanding the reflection they saw in it was themselves.

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
9.0

That's my job, that's what I do, I'd like to think if you're seeing me you're having the worst day of your life. Quite a debut from director and writer Dan Gilroy, Nightcrawler stars Jake Gyllenhall as Louis Bloom, a low level Los Angles thief desperate for work. Stumbling upon an accident he is ... introduced to the world of video news filming, opening his eyes to the money that can be made out of real life crime. Muscling his way onto the scene, it's not long before Louis blurs the line between the rights and wrongs of the occupation. We here have our eyes opened to the world of the nightcrawlers (genuine people), and it's a murky one. Gilroy enjoys multi genre blending, splicing bits of horror thriller conventions with satirical barbs pointed at the television based media. Bloom is a frightening character, a sociopath that easily manoeuvres his way around this shifty world, and Gyllenhaal superbly brings him to life. Gaunt (Gyllenhaal lost a lot of weight for the part) with hollow eyes, and spouting management monologues he has learned off of the internet, Bloom only see human misery as a way of making money. Not that TV station editor Nina Romina (Renee Russo) is that much of a better person, and the relationship between the two is troublesome yet dynamic thanks to the excellent script. The look of the picture needed to be atmospherically tight to the thematics at work, and thankfully that is the case. Predominantly set at night, it's all darkness and shadows that in turn are mixed with neon lighted cityscapes and dimmed lamplights. Bloom is at home here, the surroundings match his bents, he has found his calling to a side of the City of Angels which has a fascinating car crash kind of believability to it. The key to it all is that Gilroy and Gyllenhaal rope us viewers in to the point we can't look away, even as Bloom gets worse, morally bankrupt, we are right there with him looking trough his cameras. The relationship between Bloom and his sole employee, Rick (Riz Ahmed) is a little undernourished, but it's a minor complaint. For this is a sharp piece of film making, gloomy of course, but thrilling and deliciously troubling into the bargain. 9/10

May 16, 2024
John Chard
9.0

That's my job, that's what I do, I'd like to think if you're seeing me you're having the worst day of your life. Quite a debut from director and writer Dan Gilroy, Nightcrawler stars Jake Gyllenhall as Louis Bloom, a low level Los Angles thief desperate for work. Stumbling upon an accident he is ... introduced to the world of video news filming, opening his eyes to the money that can be made out of real life crime. Muscling his way onto the scene, it's not long before Louis blurs the line between the rights and wrongs of the occupation. We here have our eyes opened to the world of the nightcrawlers (genuine people), and it's a murky one. Gilroy enjoys multi genre blending, splicing bits of horror thriller conventions with satirical barbs pointed at the television based media. Bloom is a frightening character, a sociopath that easily manoeuvres his way around this shifty world, and Gyllenhaal superbly brings him to life. Gaunt (Gyllenhaal lost a lot of weight for the part) with hollow eyes, and spouting management monologues he has learned off of the internet, Bloom only see human misery as a way of making money. Not that TV station editor Nina Romina (Renee Russo) is that much of a better person, and the relationship between the two is troublesome yet dynamic thanks to the excellent script. The look of the picture needed to be atmospherically tight to the thematics at work, and thankfully that is the case. Predominantly set at night, it's all darkness and shadows that in turn are mixed with neon lighted cityscapes and dimmed lamplights. Bloom is at home here, the surroundings match his bents, he has found his calling to a side of the City of Angels which has a fascinating car crash kind of believability to it. The key to it all is that Gilroy and Gyllenhaal rope us viewers in to the point we can't look away, even as Bloom gets worse, morally bankrupt, we are right there with him looking trough his cameras. The relationship between Bloom and his sole employee, Rick (Riz Ahmed) is a little undernourished, but it's a minor complaint. For this is a sharp piece of film making, gloomy of course, but stylish with it, it's also thrilling and deliciously troubling into the bargain. 9/10

May 16, 2024
TitanGusang
10.0

_Nightcrawler_ shows the dark and sadistic rise of an underground freelance video producer that left me on the edge of my seat in disbelief throughout the entire film. The film begins following Lou Bloom, a man down on his luck during economic turmoil trying to find his way in the world. The whol ... e first act really builds his sense of helplessness and drive to help lift himself out of his financial hardship. This drive is built upon throughout the entire story as with each step Bloom’s morals and societal lines drift farther and farther from the norms. The entire theme of the story really resonates with common day America, as you are told to work hard and pave a path for yourself no matter the cost to those around you. Dan Gilroy did an outstanding job with the direction and writing of the entire film. The unsettling nature of dialogue and characters actions/motivations is incredibly eerie as it is indicative of society today. Each scene feels real as if it is a retelling of true events. I believed every second of Lou Bloom as a character, and that is largely due to Jake Gyllenhall’s best performance to date. Gyllenhall does such an excellent job of putting on this outcast persona. As a loner, he spends most of his time learning on the internet and due to that he does not really understand the nuances of everyday life. This is done tremendously well as every line delivered by Gyllenhall is so sharp and awkward, but the source of the words is tremendously powerful. The sense of emotion displayed by the lead is fantastic as well, he swings from being incredibly upset to quickly turning into a calm put together businessman. It demonstrates Bloom’s extreme passion for this work as his emotions blind him to not only his speech but slowly morality. Every aspect of Gyllenhall’s performance was incredibly visceral and every bit deserving of an Oscar. I touched a lot on the main lead here, but the supporting cast was all around spectacular. Rene Russo and Riz Ahmed did excellent jobs in their parts. They were able to mirror the audience's reactions to the unhinged nature that is Lou Bloom, this aspect really resonated with me. Overall, _Nightcrawler_ was one of the best movies I have seen in a long time. It was able to capture me in the world and had me completely engaged with the story Gilroy was attempting to deliver. The film ends with a bang and has left me thinking about it hours after viewing. **Grade:** _97%_ **Verdict:** _Masterpiece_

Jul 15, 2022