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A just paroled white supremacist and his ruthless girlfriend kill a cop and take an African American family hostage. Meanwhile, Sobecki, the heavily-tattooed supremacist leader who oversees his criminal empire from behind bars, is not thrilled when he learns of his charges screw-up. The patriarch of the family, an ornery ex-con himself, must rely on his wit and understanding of the racist mind to find a plan to free his family, but not before he confronts his own brand of bigotry and anger.


















1 May 1972, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

24 April 1974, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA

26 August 1988, Greenwich, Connecticut, USA

22 July 1946, San Francisco, California, USA



26 March 1982, England, UK

26 January 1977, New York, USA

25 February 1973, White Bluff, Tennessee, USA

17 April 1964, Los Angeles, California, USA




13 July 1971

4 July 1974

9 November 1955, Newark, New Jersey, USA


18 November 1961, New York City, New York, USA


8 February 1981, Seminole, Florida, USA

16 February 1974, Oakland, California, USA




January 28, 2015
Supremacy is a well-acted, abysmally written, deeply unpleasant exercise that pays no dividends of insight for the chore of enduring its endless racial epithets.
January 27, 2015
[A] dour, dreary drama ...
June 07, 2016
'Supremacy' might function as a 'Clockwork Orange' type therapy for death-row white supremacists.
January 29, 2015
The film plays out almost like a conventional Hollywood hostage thriller but for the incendiary, racially charged subtext.
February 02, 2015
A pretty preposterous plotline, but who am I to argue with a tale presumably based on a true story?
January 26, 2015
The characters shout themselves hoarse, but they don't really say anything, and it isn't long before we feel like hostages ourselves, bound by the filmmakers' strained moral outrage.
January 29, 2015
It's so grueling an ordeal that its revelations barely penetrate the murk.
January 29, 2015
To make a movie about Aryans, you really need to have some sort of psychological insight into what makes them tick. Supremacy lacks any such insight, which makes it watchable, although never especially impactful.