After being dumped by his fiancée, a nice guy seeks dating advice from his cynical older brother, who believes men and women still follow primitive relationship patterns from caveman times.After being dumped by his fiancée, a nice guy seeks dating advice from his cynical older brother, who believes men and women still follow primitive relationship patterns from caveman times.After being dumped by his fiancée, a nice guy seeks dating advice from his cynical older brother, who believes men and women still follow primitive relationship patterns from caveman times.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Serah D'Laine
- Erica
- (as Sarah Laine)
Brandon Ray Olive
- Matteo
- (as Brandon Olive)
JoLane Lentz
- Dina
- (as Jolane Lentz)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
5.1313
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Featured reviews
Realistic-esque rom-com
Having no knowledge of this film and not having watched any trailers prior to watching, expectations were very little. As a result, the film was better than expected. It has an independent feel and a very realistic type of film where situations the characters were put in, are familiar and occur in real life. The acting was passable for and better than expected. Overall a solid lesser known film.
A fun movie that has a very authentic take on relationships
This film displays several different dynamics: friendships between guys, friendships between girls and guys, brotherly love and romantic relationships. Each of these relationships are portrayed very honestly and bluntly, but in a fun and amusing way.
Paul Alessi (as Kyle) and Ross McCall (as Ethan) have great chemistry as brothers. Kyle makes it his job to teach Ethan how to be a stronger, more confident, well-respected man in his personal life, which also transfers over to his professional life as budding film director. Kyle's strategy is tough love, but a lot of what he says makes sense and is even backed by a scientific study!
If you want to see an original and unique take on a romantic comedy, I highly recommend watching this!
Paul Alessi (as Kyle) and Ross McCall (as Ethan) have great chemistry as brothers. Kyle makes it his job to teach Ethan how to be a stronger, more confident, well-respected man in his personal life, which also transfers over to his professional life as budding film director. Kyle's strategy is tough love, but a lot of what he says makes sense and is even backed by a scientific study!
If you want to see an original and unique take on a romantic comedy, I highly recommend watching this!
Knuckle Draggers - A relationship roller coaster ride ...
Knuckle Draggers is the perfect film to watch with a group of people. The ensemble cast presents a range of characters where a connection can be made with one or more of the situations presented. The story is a relationship roller coaster ride with funny highs and dramatic lows.
The opening credits begin with a series of neat caveman drawings with music that set the tone of the story. You'll feel like a voyeur peeking into each character's scenario. Starting with Kyle (Paul J Alessi) who is able to take control of a bar scene injustice that many guys wish they could do in real life. Next is the view of Kyle's brother, Ethan (Ross McCall), who has problems with his fiancé and ends up being dumped. As Ethan struggles to find out what he can do to get back together with his ex-fiancé, his brother Kyle solicits advice to help him get over her and move forward with a chance at a better relationship with someone new. Things don't work as planned and Ethan's friend, Patricia (Amie Barsky) submits advice of her own, which conflicts with Kyle's guidance causing friction between them. A telling scene of this can be found when the three of them are at Ethan's home getting him ready for a date and there is a showdown with a comparison of films representing the views of men and women.
Just as the saying, "It takes a village to raise a child" pertains to parenting; people may need help with relationship problems from many people: family and friends. This is the case with this film, where different characters of the ensemble cast are in different stages from being single, married, or divorced. No matter what stage, there are problems that pop up, and the main key ingredients that seem to help solve issues, are communication and confidence.
I watched this movie with a group of family members that ranged in age and everyone simply loved it... each mentioned different funny things that stuck out as memorable scenes. This is a film geared towards guys and girls alike who can determine for themselves whether we have evolved from caveman times.
An awesome cast made this movie happen, and you can feel the chemistry between them that makes this story work. I've seen some of the excellent film work by Ross McCall, Paul J. Alessi, and Amie Barsky in the past. I haven't seen the other cast (Omar Gooding, Justin Baldoni, Danielle Nicolet, Brandon Olive, Serah D'Laine, or Jennifer Alden) before this, but I loved the job they did making their characters believable and I'll watch for their future projects. I'm also looking forward to more films by Knuckle Dragger's writer, director Alex Ranarivelo.
The opening credits begin with a series of neat caveman drawings with music that set the tone of the story. You'll feel like a voyeur peeking into each character's scenario. Starting with Kyle (Paul J Alessi) who is able to take control of a bar scene injustice that many guys wish they could do in real life. Next is the view of Kyle's brother, Ethan (Ross McCall), who has problems with his fiancé and ends up being dumped. As Ethan struggles to find out what he can do to get back together with his ex-fiancé, his brother Kyle solicits advice to help him get over her and move forward with a chance at a better relationship with someone new. Things don't work as planned and Ethan's friend, Patricia (Amie Barsky) submits advice of her own, which conflicts with Kyle's guidance causing friction between them. A telling scene of this can be found when the three of them are at Ethan's home getting him ready for a date and there is a showdown with a comparison of films representing the views of men and women.
Just as the saying, "It takes a village to raise a child" pertains to parenting; people may need help with relationship problems from many people: family and friends. This is the case with this film, where different characters of the ensemble cast are in different stages from being single, married, or divorced. No matter what stage, there are problems that pop up, and the main key ingredients that seem to help solve issues, are communication and confidence.
I watched this movie with a group of family members that ranged in age and everyone simply loved it... each mentioned different funny things that stuck out as memorable scenes. This is a film geared towards guys and girls alike who can determine for themselves whether we have evolved from caveman times.
An awesome cast made this movie happen, and you can feel the chemistry between them that makes this story work. I've seen some of the excellent film work by Ross McCall, Paul J. Alessi, and Amie Barsky in the past. I haven't seen the other cast (Omar Gooding, Justin Baldoni, Danielle Nicolet, Brandon Olive, Serah D'Laine, or Jennifer Alden) before this, but I loved the job they did making their characters believable and I'll watch for their future projects. I'm also looking forward to more films by Knuckle Dragger's writer, director Alex Ranarivelo.
- MovieVine.com
10csreggio
Didn't think Knuckle Dragging could be so Delightful !
Loved It !! Great story, characters and acting . Funny, honest and direct . Relationship perspective from different character viewpoints was quite amusing .. Worth a watch ... glad I did !!! Bravo !!!
Loved it
I could see myself in many of those scenes and I could feel the actors were really well-connected. Good moral lessons to get out of this as well and it shows how complicated life can be.
Did you know
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $620,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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