Randy Travis

Randy Travis

  • Born: 1959-5-4
  • Height: 5' 9" (1.75 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Consuelo 2021-12-31 08:02:33

      The rainmaker is beautiful!

      The rainmaker has two major attractions to me!

      First of all, the superb looks of matt and claire!

      The second is the plot of the story. Matt, who has just graduated, went to an unreliable law firm that is "the same as the inside". On the surface, he is unfortunate, but here he actually met the partner...

    • Alexis 2021-12-31 08:02:33

      Law meets reality

      Before I went to the law department, I always thought that lawyers were sacred. More than 20 years after graduating, even though they are not engaged in the legal profession, I know that they are difficult and helpless. It is more bitter than working in the United States. At the end of the movie,...

    • Aurore 2022-03-28 09:01:05

      Are we going to join the world in the end, if you didn't insist on it at first, then yes. If you have it, just wait and see.

    • Dameon 2022-03-26 09:01:07

      Every lawyer may cross the line, and the more the line is crossed, the more the line does not exist. Also like the name of the movie, the creator of miracles.

    The Rainmaker quotes

    • Deck Shiffler: [after waking Rudy with a before-sunrise phone call] Guess who died last night?

      Rudy Baylor: Who? Do you ever sleep?

      Deck Shiffler: Harvey Hale! Age 62, quite a pedigree.

      Rudy Baylor: Judge Hale?

      Deck Shiffler: Yep. Croaked with a heart attack, dropped dead by his swimming pool.

      Rudy Baylor: You gotta be kidding me!

      Deck Shiffler: Guess which newly-made judge was assigned to Great Benefit's case?

      Rudy Baylor: How the hell am I supposed to know that, Deck?

      Deck Shiffler: Tyrone Kipler. Black, Harvard, civil-rights lawyer. Hates Tinley Britt, and he's tough on insurance companies. You know what a Rainmaker is, kid? The bucks are gonna be falling from the sky.

    • [first lines]

      Rudy Baylor: My father hated lawyers all his life. He wasn't a great guy, my old man. He drank and beat up my mother; he beat me up too. So you might think I became a lawyer just to piss him off. But you'd be wrong. I wanted to be a lawyer ever since I read about the Civil Rights lawyers in the 50s and 60s, and the amazing uses they found for the law. They did what a lot of people thought was the impossible. They gave lawyers a good name. And so I went to law school. And it did piss my father off - he was pissed off anyway.