
movie plot
A frustrated man decides to take justice into his own hands after a plea bargain sets one of his family's killers free.
Our Score
8.1
EPISODE SUMMARY
Law Abiding Citizen starts as a cathartic justice-and-revenge fantasy — and then slowly reveals the cost of indulging it.
In this episode of The Nightshift, we break down Gerard Butler’s 2009 revenge thriller and ask the central question the movie dares you to wrestle with: when does righteous anger stop being justice and become something far more dangerous?
We dig into Clyde Shelton as one of modern cinema’s most compelling anti-heroes, the moral failure of the legal system that creates him, and the exact moment the audience is forced to stop rooting for him. Along the way, we unpack the film’s most infamous scenes — the mirror, the executions, the courtroom manipulation — and debate whether the movie is critiquing revenge… or secretly indulging it.
This is a Nightshift movie through and through: dark, pulpy, morally messy, and built for late-night conversation. Turn your brain on just enough — but not so much that you miss the ride.
Topics include:
Why Law Abiding Citizen works as a revenge fantasy — until it doesn’t
Clyde Shelton as an anti-hero (and eventual terrorist)
The justice system vs. moral satisfaction
The film’s most brutal and unforgettable scenes
Where the movie breaks realism — and why it still works
Gerard Butler’s perfect role in the right kind of movie
🎬 Law Abiding Citizen (2009)
🎙️ The Nightshift — clocking in on movies that hit harder after dark.






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