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- Highway Horror Trucker Brings Grindhouse Revenge to VOD This March
Highway Horror Trucker Brings Grindhouse Revenge to VOD This March
A Blood-Soaked Road Trip Into Grindhouse Revenge
Breaking Glass Pictures is gearing up to unleash Trucker, an explosive action-horror thriller that blends highway terror with vigilante justice. Directed by Errol Sack and written by Steven Shaffer, the film hits major VOD platforms on March 10, 2026, promising a white-knuckle ride for fans of grindhouse revenge cinema.

A Tragedy Turned Vendetta
Trucker wastes no time establishing its brutal premise. When a long-haul trucker's family is killed in a fiery crash caused by reckless teens, he miraculously survives the tragedy that destroys his world. Nursed back to health by a mysterious old man, the grieving father transforms his trauma and rage into something darker: a brutal campaign of retribution against those responsible.
What follows is a relentless descent into obsession, violence, and dark revenge. This isn't a story about justice—it's about a man pushed beyond his breaking point who decides the only answer is blood.
Grindhouse Meets the Open Road
The film embraces its grindhouse roots unabashetically. With an 85-minute runtime and TV-MA rating for strong violence, gore, language, and horror themes, Trucker delivers exactly what its premise promises: high-speed action fused with exploitation cinema intensity.
Highway horror has always been a potent subgenre. There's something uniquely terrifying about the open road—the isolation, the vulnerability, the sense that anything could happen miles from help. Films like The Hitcher, Joy Ride, and Duel have mined this territory effectively. Trucker joins that tradition while adding the vigilante revenge element that made films like Death Wish and The Crow cultural touchstones.
The open road becomes a hunting ground, and the trucker transforms from victim to predator. It's a classic revenge narrative elevated by the unique setting and the visceral nature of highway violence.
The Cast and Crew
Produced by Alexia Cirino, Chuck Cirino, Dennis McCarthy, and Steven Shaffer under ES Films, Trucker assembles a cast mixing fresh faces with recognizable character actors.
Leading the charge is Milo Hayden (Holiday Twist, Shark Bait), who takes on the challenging role of a man consumed by grief and rage. It's a performance that needs to balance sympathy with monstrousness—we need to understand his pain while being horrified by his actions.

Milo Hayden
The supporting cast includes 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 Jim Palmer, whose resume includes massive blockbusters like Terminator 2, National Treasure, Guardians of the Galaxy, and Pirates of the Caribbean.
Director Errol Sack brings a vision that Breaking Glass Pictures CEO Rich Wolff describes as "emotionally charged" and resonant with fans of classic vigilante cinema while feeling "fresh and timely."
Why Vigilante Cinema Still Works
Revenge stories never really go out of style because they tap into something primal. When the system fails—when justice doesn't come—there's a dark satisfaction in watching someone take matters into their own hands. It's cathartic, even when we know it's morally questionable.
The best vigilante films understand this tension. They don't necessarily endorse their protagonists' actions, but they make us understand them. Trucker seems positioned to walk that line, using the trucker's family tragedy as the inciting incident that transforms him from everyman to something darker.
The mysterious old man who nurses the trucker back to health adds an intriguing wrinkle. Is he a mentor figure? An enabler? Someone with his own agenda? That relationship could add psychological depth to what might otherwise be straightforward revenge exploitation.
The Breaking Glass Difference
Breaking Glass Pictures has built a reputation for distributing genre films that might not get theatrical releases but find devoted audiences on VOD platforms. They specialize in horror, thriller, and LGBTQ+ cinema that pushes boundaries and takes risks.
Trucker fits squarely in their wheelhouse—a film too violent and uncompromising for mainstream theatrical distribution but perfect for the VOD market where genre fans actively seek out intense, unapologetic experiences.
The March 10 release date positions Trucker strategically. Early spring often sees a lull in major releases, making it easier for smaller films to find their audience. Genre fans looking for something intense and different will have Trucker readily available across major platforms.
What to Expect
At 85 minutes, Trucker embraces lean, mean storytelling. There's no bloat here—just relentless forward momentum as the trucker hunts down everyone responsible for his family's death. That runtime suggests a film that wastes no time on unnecessary subplots or character development that doesn't serve the central revenge narrative.
The TV-MA rating indicates the film doesn't pull punches. Expect graphic violence, brutal deaths, and the kind of gore that exploitation cinema enthusiasts crave. This isn't sanitized revenge—it's messy, visceral, and designed to provoke strong reactions.
The highway setting offers unique opportunities for vehicular mayhem. Semi-trucks make excellent weapons, and the open road provides endless possibilities for creative kills and tense chase sequences. If Sack leans into the vehicle-based violence, Trucker could deliver some genuinely memorable action sequences.
Finding Its Audience
Trucker isn't trying to be for everyone, and that's fine. It's aimed squarely at fans of grindhouse revenge cinema, highway horror, and exploitation films who appreciate unflinching violence in service of a primal revenge story.
For that audience, this looks like catnip. A grieving father. A mysterious mentor. Reckless teens who deserve what's coming. Highway violence. Gore. Vengeance. All the ingredients for a satisfying exploitation experience are present.
The question is execution. Can Sack and Shaffer deliver on the promise of that premise? Does the film have anything to say beyond "revenge feels good"? Are the kills creative and memorable? Does Hayden's performance give the trucker enough humanity to make his descent into darkness compelling rather than just exploitative?
We'll find out March 10.
Rev Your Engines
Trucker arrives March 10, 2026, on major VOD platforms, ready to deliver highway horror and grindhouse vengeance to audiences craving intense genre experiences. It's a throwback to exploitation cinema's glory days filtered through modern filmmaking sensibilities—or at least, that's the promise.
For fans of revenge thrillers, highway horror, and uncompromising violence, Trucker looks like essential viewing. Just remember: the road is long, dark, and unforgiving. And somewhere out there, a grieving father with nothing left to lose is coming for blood.
Buckle up. This is going to be a rough ride.