Trap House Review – A High Speed Adrenaline Fueled Ride, Gripping, Entertaining
- Details
- Category: Haute This Issue
- Published on Tuesday, 11 November 2025 12:02
- Written by Janet Walker
Trap House, from Aura Entertainment, presents a DEA action thriller as a team of expertly trained agents faceoff against a Mexican cartel, only to be upended by an unknown gang who begin disrupting the cartels expansion plans.
The film begins with El Paso DEA Agent Ray Seale, played by Dave Bautista and his partner, Andre Washburn, played by Bobby Cannavale, driving a RV in the desert wasteland somewhere between the border of Texas and Juarez, Mexico.
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Through the banter between them, it is obvious they have been friends for some time, as the conversation turns serious and we understand that Seale is now a single parent, and his son Cody, played by Jack Champion, is pushing the boundaries.
The film then cuts to a high school, where a group of kids, Deni Morales, played by Sophia Lillis, Jesse played by Blue del Barrio, Kyle Alvarez, played by Zaire Adams and Yvonne Reynolds, played Whiteny Peak are gathered watching as Cody is doing doughnuts in the parking lot. Once he arrives, we understand the connection between this unusual group, they are all DEA agents kids, and today something is going down.
We return to the RV and suddenly we understand, the back is filled with a group of DEA agents. As Seale pulls into the gas station, a man runs out and in seconds he pulls a gun him, and Washburn from the passenger side fires a tranquilizer into his neck.
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As they begin to raid the store, they find a tunnel and Seale, Washburn, and Padilla, played by David Castaneda, realize the tunnel runs all the way to Mexico, when suddenly Seale, sees it has been rigged with explosives and run for the exit as the entire tunnel system begins to explode and the three of them barely make it out of the store before a wall of flame shoots through the tunnel and the entire place explodes. Just as they make it out, a sniper from across the border begins shooting. Padilla is killed.
Jesse, who is sitting in class, is called to the principals office. His mother is waiting. The news is devastating for the kids, who understand it could have been any of their parents. Days later, we find out the DEA death benefits do little to care for the families of the agents killed in the line of duty.
Mexican cartel boss Guzman, played by Tony Dalton, has gathered his entire network of mules to his home, as he understands there is a rat in his network, and someone is a DEA informant. His sister, Natalia Cabrera, played by Kate del Castillo, is living in El Paso with her daughter Teresa, played by Inde Navarrette, working to build the cartel's distribution network stateside, is also at the house as the brother and sister decide their next move.
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By chance, Seale gets a call from Washburn about a cartel trap house they just busted. Dragging Cody along with him, they do a walk through, and Cody sees stacks of cash being bagged and the idea comes to him. He pitches his idea of robbing the trap houses to help Jesse and his mother and cover the expenses that forced them to move. The kids all agree.
After their first effort, which netted them barely nothing, except experience, they decide to hit the courier, and elderly man, played by Danny Vinson. The kids, who have watched their agent parents for decades plan ops, decide if the courier makes the same run every week, they have time to plan the op with precision.
Once they hijack the money courier, the simmering tensions burst to a raging boil, and Guzman, who laughed at the first jacked trap house, has reached his limit. He and his sister, Natalia, are seeking vengeance and Ray Seale is number one on their list.
Cody realizes he's entered them all into a deadly game, and when Seale finds out the truth, he desperately tries to protect his son from the increasing danger that has resulted from their heists as the DEA get closers and the cartel circle waiting to strike.
This sets up the ultimate end of game packed finale, and no one is off limits as the cartel is determined to recover their product.
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Trap House, a fast action thriller, delivers heightened suspense, and immediately grabs the attention with an intense and riveting clash between the two sides, drawing a clear understanding of the film's heroes.
The familiar cast, for audiences, led by Dave Bautista, Bobby Cannavale, Tony Dalton, and Kate Del Castillo, are easily recognized and immediately confirm the storyline, without dialogue, so that the viewer understands the dynamics of the pursuit and the hunt. The actors each deliver authenticity in their respective roles. The casting is excellent. Dave Bautista's tattoos, which are not covered, add realism to his role as a federal agent, and gives the impression body art is becoming more acceptable in portrayals, functioning as part of the actor's costume.
A dramatic, high speed adrenaline fueled ride, Trap House is a riveting three act film, and moves efficiently, gripping the attention with each plot twist and turn.
Intense, exciting, and entertaining, Trap House opens November 14, 2025. Exclusively in theaters. Check local listings. See it.
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Country: U.S.
Language: English, Spanish with English subtitles.
Runtime: 102 minutes.
Director: Michael Dowse.
Producer: Dave Bautista, Rebecca Feuer, Sarah Gabriel, Marc Goldberg, Todd Lundbohm, Jonathan Meisner, Christian Mercuri, Michael Pruss.
Executive Producer: Fred Corbett, Paul O. Davis, Robert Dean, Michael Dowse, Jennifer Eriksson, Mark Fasano, Patrick Fischer, Joshua Harris, Ruzanna Kegeyan, Nathan Klingher, Richard Kondal, Jina Panebianco, Ridley Scott, Dasha Sherman, John D. Straley, Gareth Williams.
Writer: Gary Scott Thompson, Tom O'Connor.
Cast: Dave Bautista, Bobby Cannavale, Jack Champion, Sophia Lillis, Tony Dalton, Kate Del Castillo, Whitney Peak, Inde Navarrette, Blu del Barrio, Zaire Adams, Danny Vinson, Manny Rubio, Ammie Masterson, Anthony Pagliaro Jr., Randy Gonzalez, Kelsey Landon, Zijah Graca, Alexander Alayon Jr.
Janet Walker is the publisher, founder, and sole owner of Haute-Lifestyle.com. A graduate of New York University, she has been covering international news through the Beltway Insider, a weekly review of the nation’s top stories, for more than a decade. A general beat writer/reporter and entertainment/film critic, she is also an accomplished news/investigative news/crime reporter and submitted for Pulitzer Prize consideration "Cops Conspire to Deep Six Sex Assaults" in the Breaking News Category and was persuaded to withdraw the submission. Ms. Walker has completed five screenplays "The Six Sides of Truth," "The Assassins of Fifth Avenue," "The Wednesday Killer," "The Manhattan Project," and the sci-fi thriller "Project 13: The Last Day." She has also published “Unholy Alliances: A True Crime Story,” and “Days, Times, Seasons, and Events: A Collection of Poetry & Prose,” which can be purchased here. She is a member of the Los Angeles Press Club, the National Writers Union, and a member of the International Federation of Journalists.

