Breaking Glass Pictures Acquires Trucker, Sets March 10, 2026 VOD Release
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Breaking Glass Pictures Sets March 10, 2026 VOD Release for Vigilante Thriller Trucker
Highway horror is about to get personal.
Breaking Glass Pictures has acquired the worldwide rights to Trucker, a revenge-fueled action-horror thriller directed by Errol Sack and written by Steven Shaffer. The film will debut across major VOD platforms on March 10, 2026.
Produced under the ES Films banner by Alexia Cirino, Chuck Cirino, Dennis McCarthy and Shaffer, Trucker leans directly into grindhouse intensity — blending road rage, trauma and vigilante justice into a tight 85-minute descent into obsession.
The premise is brutally straightforward.
A long-haul trucker survives a fiery crash that kills his family — an accident caused by a group of reckless teens. Left broken but alive, he is nursed back to health by a mysterious old man. Instead of rebuilding, he rebuilds for vengeance.
What follows is not redemption.
It’s retribution.
The grieving father channels his rage into a calculated campaign against those responsible, pushing the narrative into white-knuckle territory where justice and brutality blur into something far darker. With a TV-MA rating for strong violence, gore, language and horror themes, the film does not appear interested in restraint.
This is revenge cinema with its foot on the gas.
The cast includes Milo Hayden (Holiday Twist, Shark Bait), Nicole Mattox (Lady Outlaw, Dungeons of Ecstasy), Katherine Gibson (Devil’s Game), Dare Taylor (Girls On Film), Lauren Parkinson (Paul T. Goldman, 7 Days to Hell), and veteran performer Jim Palmer (Terminator 2, National Treasure, Guardians of the Galaxy, Pirates of the Caribbean).
CEO Rich Wolff described the film as emotionally charged while tapping into the lineage of classic vigilante cinema — a subgenre that has historically reflected societal frustration and moral ambiguity through explosive catharsis.
Highway-set revenge thrillers carry a specific energy. Open road isolation. Mechanical power. The idea that momentum itself becomes a weapon. Trucker appears ready to exploit that aesthetic fully, delivering grindhouse brutality with modern pacing.
Whether audiences embrace the vengeance fantasy or recoil from it, one thing is clear: this isn’t a film about forgiveness.
It’s about the cost of loss — and the cost of answering it with violence.
Trucker hits VOD platforms worldwide on March 10, 2026.





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