THE RIP – The Review

THE RIP. (L to R) Matt Damon as Lieutenant Dane Dumars and Ben Affleck as Det Sergeant J.D. Byrne in The Rip. Cr. Warrick Page/Netflix © 2025.

By Marc Butterfield

“Are we the good guys?” – Lieutenant Dane Dumars (Matt Damon)

Matt Damon and Ben Affleck have been friends since they were in elementary school, and now they’re bringing that friendship to Netflix. The duo are reteaming for the new crime thriller The Rip, from writer-director Joe Carnahan (Narc, Smokin’ Aces, Copshop, Boss Level). Also coming along for the ride are Steven Yeun, Kyle Chandler, Teyana Taylor, Catalina Sandino Moreno, and Sasha Calle; the film is produced by Artists Equity, the studio-led studio that Damon and Affleck founded in 2022.

If you think you’re going to walk in and figure this one out while watching, I must say, you probably aren’t. The story has more twists and turns than a Monaco race track, and you catch on pretty quick that nothing is as it seems. The pacing is smooth, the dialogue is tight and economical, the action does NOT disappoint either. It may be a Netflix movie, but it really could have killed at the box office. I like Carnahan’s movies, and this is amongst his best. The chemistry with Affleck and Damon has not diminished with time, and the supporting cast all pull their weight with them. It’s definitely the edge-of-your seat action one wants from a crime drama, and the settings all feel like they could stand up to much bigger budget movies.

Beware: spoilers ahead, so if you don’t want to know too much, save the below for later.

THE RIP follows Damon – Lieutenant Dane Dumars – and Affleck – Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne – as Miami cop partners who find themselves in a sticky situation after their team finds $24 million stashed away in a safehouse. Required by law to count the money before leaving the scene, the cops and their team must survive the night — and each other. Plus the team is already on edge — and under FBI investigation — after the murder of their captain, Jackie Velez (Lina Esco). 

And they find the police informant in the house, Dumars and Byrne’s first instinct is soon proven correct: The money is from the cartel.

Desi (Sasha Calle), the home’s owner, is an unwitting pawn in the organization’s game. The cartel paid Desi to place buckets of cash in the attic of her new home, inherited from her recently deceased grandmother. With plenty of funeral and medical expenses to pay, it was an offer the young woman couldn’t refuse. Partner turns on partner, bullets start flying, and the cartel is on the prowl. When threatening phone calls start coming through and the house is hit with a barrage of bullets, the team naturally blames the cartel.  But a nighttime chase quickly resolves that question. Byrne finds common cause with the cartel lookout who was communicating through the porch light. He even helps him run off the real culprits and coordinates a phone conversation with his cartel chief (Sal Lopez), who convinces Byrne and Dumars that the cartel didn’t fire a shot.

THE RIP. (L to R) Steven Yeun as Detective Mike Ro, Matt Damon as Lieutenant Dane Dumars, Writer/Director Joe Carnahan, Ben Affleck as Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne and Kyle Chandler as DEA Agent Mateo ‘Matty’ Nix on the set of The Rip.Cr. Claire Folger/Netflix © 2025.

“The Rip came out of a deeply personal experience that my friend went through, both as a father and as head of tactical narcotics for the Miami Dade police department,” Carnahan explains. “It’s inspired in part by his life and then, by my enduring love for those classic ‘70’s cop thrillers that really valued the character and interpersonal relationships and became touchstones of that era — films like Serpico and Prince of The City and more recently, Michael Mann’s Heat.”

The viewer will discover that there are details in the movie drawn directly from officer Chris Casiano’s true story that inspired the film. The final piece of tension emerges from a procedural detail: will the rip’s final total match the count performed by the Tactical Narcotics Team? It does, to the dime: $20,650,480.

Dumars says goodbye to Desi, and reveals the truth behind his tattoos. They’re not a somber reminder of his duty, necessarily. They’re a memorial to his son. “Are we the good guys?” was the last thing his son said to him; “We are and always will be” was the last thing he said to his son.

Shot masterfully by cinematographer Juanmi Azpiroz, the film is filled with gunfights, car chases, and rooftop shootouts. This is The Rip. You won’t want to miss it.

Watch on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/81915745 

4 out of 4 stars

Check Out This Brand New Look AT THE RIP Starring Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Steven Yeun, Teyana Taylor, Catalina Sandino Moreno And Kyle Chandler

THE RIP. (L to R) Steven Yeun as Detective Mike Ro, Matt Damon as Lieutenant Dane Dumars, Ben Affleck as Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne and Kyle Chandler as DEA Agent Mateo ‘Matty’ Nix in The Rip. Cr. Claire Folger/Netflix © 2025.

Dropping on Netflix January 16 is director Joe Carnahan’s THE RIP, starring Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Steven Yeun, Teyana Taylor, Sasha Calle, Catalina Sandino Moreno & Kyle Chandler.

Upon discovering millions in cash in a derelict stash house, trust among a team of Miami cops begins to fray. As outside forces learn about the size of the seizure, everything is called into question — including who they can rely on.

Carnahan directed Narc and Copshop. Of his new film, he says, “I’ve always been a big fan of the cop film.” He also drew inspiration from the story of his “very dear friend,” a police officer in Miami, who taught Carnahan all about “rips” — a term used to describe when cops seize illegal weapons, drugs, or, as in The Rip, lots and lots of cash. Read more about the film over at TUDUM.

https://www.netflix.com/tudum/articles/the-rip-trailer-ben-affleck-matt-damon?utm_source=mediacenter

Watch on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/81915745

THE RIP. (L to R) Steven Yeun as Detective Mike Ro, Matt Damon as Lieutenant Dane Dumars, Writer/Director Joe Carnahan, Ben Affleck as Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne and Kyle Chandler as DEA Agent Mateo ‘Matty’ Nix on the set of THE RIP. Cr. Claire Folger/Netflix © 2025.

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of THE BOOK OF CLARENCE

From visionary filmmaker Jeymes Samuel, The Book of Clarence is a bold new take on the timeless Hollywood era Biblical epic. Streetwise but struggling, Clarence (LaKeith Stanfield) is trying to find a better life for himself and his family, make himself worthy to the woman he loves, and prove that he’s not a nobody. Captivated by the power and glory of the rising Messiah and His apostles, he risks everything to carve his own path to a divine life, a journey through which he finds redemption and faith, power and knowledge. The Book of Clarence Official Soundtrack features new music by Jeymes Samuel, JAY-Z, Lil Wayne, Kid Cudi and more.

The film stars LaKeith Stanfield, Omar Sy, Anna Diop, RJ Cyler, David Oyelowo, Micheal Ward, Alfre Woodard, Teyana Taylor, Caleb McLaughlin, Eric Kofi-Abrefa, Marianne Jean-Baptiste with James McAvoy and Benedict Cumberbatch.

https://www.thebookofclarence.movie/

The St. Louis advance screening is Thursday, January 4 at 7pm at the AMC Esquire 7.

Please arrive early as seating is not guaranteed.

Enter at the link: https://events.sonypictures.com/screenings/unsecured/main/screeningInfo.jsf?code=PBBD9ZDVS1

Rated PG-13.

Clarence (LaKeith Stanfield), Barabbas (Omar Sy) and Elijah (R.J. Cyler) in THE BOOK OF CLARENCE.

WHITE MEN CAN’T JUMP (2023) – Review

So, do you have an appetite for sports films after the entertaining true life-inspired AIR from a few weeks ago (which, BTW, is now streaming on Amazon Prime Video)? To be more specific do you have, as Cheech and Chong most famously proclaimed, a “basketball jones”? Oh, here’s the movie for you! Now unlike the earlier film, this isn’t set in the 1980s, though it has a connection to a previous decade. And it’s not “inspired by true events”. This is more of a rollicking “buddy comedy” and is a remake of a movie from over 30 years ago (the decade being the 1990s). Perhaps it will once and for all either prove this true or false per the still provocative title, WHITE MEN CAN’T JUMP.


Speaking of time, this version starts with a flashback going back only six or seven years. It’s a telling TV interview on a cable sports show profiling high school basketball phenom Kamal (Sinqua Walls), though the interview is dominated by his boasting blustering Papa Benji (Lance Reddick). We then are taken to a big championship game soon after, as Kamal has an off day leading to…an “incident”. Jump forward to now as Kamal works as a delivery driver and shares a small apartment with his mate Imani (Teyana Taylor) and their adorable five-year-old son Drew. She’s tired of styling hair in their home and is saving toward space for her own salon. Towards that, Kamal hangs out with pals Renzo (Myles Bullock) and Speedy (Vince Staples) at the basketball courts of the LA area to “hustle some cash” via “pick-up games”. But this day, an unlikely hoopster hustles them, the goofy “Whole Foods whiteboy”, Jeremy (Jack Harlow). He’s determined to work past the surgery in both (!) knees and try out for the minor leagues. Of course, he keeps that a secret from his live-in girlfriend, Tatiana (Laura Harrier), who wants to be a professional dance director. Jeremy tells her that he’s a personal trainer, and his goal is to move them out of his childhood home (he was literally born there). When he and Kamal clash again at a fitness center, an idea occurs. There’s a big hoops contest in a few weeks with a big cash prize (5 figures), but it’s got an entrance fee of over a grand. They’ll take their “act” on the “road” and accumulate the cash from “ballers” all around the SoCal area. But can these very different personalities mesh together and move past their personal demons to grab the life-changing jackpot?

Though the duo at the heart of the story aren’t major screen veterans they have an easy-going chemistry and a real rapport. Walls as Kamal may have the more compelling backstory, which he conveys just below the surface of his snarling swagger. And in his haunted eyes, Walls conveys the regrets and frustrations of a man whose future should have been “gold”. And some of that is in Harlow’s Jeremy, who keeps plugging along even as his body fights his efforts. Mainly known for his music, Harlow is a terrific screen presence with a great sense of comic timing aided by a wonky, off-kilter line delivery. Taylor is tough and tender as Imani, who also has her dreams but is angered by her role as the “planner” of her family’s destiny. Much as with Harrier, who has a softer side, until she “reads the riot act” to Jeremy when he’s too wrapped up in his goals while dismissing hers. The supporting comedy players are Bullock, who also has a quick quip ready while constantly eating, and Staples as the picked-upon (for his romantic choices) Speedy. Ah, but the real gem here is one of the last big screen performances by the much-missed Lance Reddick who turns Kamal’s blowhard daddy into a strong guiding force and later a tragic inspiration for his son. Few actors could give us such a wide character arc as this gifted man.

In the director’s chair is music video ver Calmatic in her second feature film after recently rebooting another comedy classic from the 90s, HOUSE PARTY. He brings lots of flash and rapid energy to the game sequences, while never ignoring the big dramatic beats in the script from Kenya Barris, Doug Hall, and the original’s scribe, Ron Shelton. The competitions are intense, and so are the passions between the two men and their partners. Some would zero in on the goofball antics of Jeremy and his “fish out of water” persona, but we see how the friendship with Kamal is healing for both of them, especially as Kamal learns to quiet his failure-fueled nightmares. Sure, we didn’t need a “redo” of the Snipes/Harrelson crowd-pleaser, but this “take” has some new things to say and its own retort to that put-down WHITE MEN CAN”T JUMP, because with the right pal, you can soar.


3 out of 4

WHITE MEN CAN’T JUMP streams exclusively on Hulu beginning on Friday, May 19, 2023

Catch This Funny Trailer For MADEA’S BIG HAPPY FAMILY

Watch the new trailer for MADEA’S BIG HAPPY FAMILY. What’s the funniest thing that happened when your whole family got together?

Synopsis:

Madea, everyone’s favorite wise-cracking, take-no-prisoners grandma, jumps into action when her niece, Shirley, receives distressing news about her health. All Shirley wants is to gather her three adult children around her and share the news as a family. But Tammy, Kimberly and Byron are too distracted by their own problems: Tammy can’t manage her unruly children or her broken marriage; Kimberly is gripped with anger and takes it out on her husband; and Byron, after spending two years in jail, is under pressure to deal drugs again. It’s up to Madea, with the help of the equally rambunctious Aunt Bam, to gather the clan together and make things right the only way she knows how: with a lot of tough love, laughter…and the revelation of a long-buried family secret.

Tyler Perry – screenwriter, director and two-time star (as Madea and her brother, Joe) – returns with another tender and hilarious look at love and family ties with MADEA’S BIG HAPPY FAMILY, also starring Loretta Devine, Shad “Bow Wow” Moss, David Mann, Cassi Davis, Tamela Mann, Lauren London, Isaiah Mustafa, Rodney Perry, Shannon Kane, Teyana Taylor and Natalie Desselle Reid. Lionsgate and Tyler Perry Studios present a Tyler Perry Studios/Lionsgate production, a Reuben Cannon production.

MADEA’S BIG HAPPY FAMILY is in theaters on April 22, 2011. Like the movie on Facebook HERE. Follow it on Twitter HERE.