Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Florida Passes Bill to Promote AP Class Alternative

    Shifting tastes, shrinking sales: Napa Valley’s wineries adapt amid ‘shocking’ downturn | California

    Infertility: at a time when we need the right words, some are unable to find them | Nuala McGovern

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    Naija Global News |
    Saturday, March 21
    • Business
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Education
    • Social Issues
    • Technology
    • More
      • Crime & Justice
      • Environment
      • Entertainment
    Naija Global News |
    You are at:Home»Entertainment»Criminally good: the return of the high-class crime flick | Movies
    Entertainment

    Criminally good: the return of the high-class crime flick | Movies

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtAugust 23, 2025004 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Criminally good: the return of the high-class crime flick | Movies
    Leonardo DiCaprio in Paul Thomas Anderson’s forthcoming Pynchon-inspired film One Battle After Another. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    It is clear, as we look forward to this autumn’s new films, that a crimewave of sorts is happening. Whether cosy or brutal, true-crime-ish or fictional, filled with forensic crime scenes and hazmat-suited people shuffling out of despoiled apartments, or with twinkly-eyed character actors sampling cake and making coppers look like chumps, or with stylish lone women menaced by a criminal mystery that only they can solve … crime is everywhere, and showing it’s a solid bet at the movies.

    True crime and cold crime podcast fanciers are being catered for, and lovers of genteel murder mysteries, and those who might enjoy a sophisticated comic twist on crime in a luxurious or blue-collar setting. Streaming platforms have shown that documentaries about crime get views, and terrestrial television has long since allowed drama to be dominated by crime. The movies are now taking the hint.

    There is tasty-looking fare with The Woman in Cabin 10, adapted from the page-turner by Ruth Ware, with Keira Knightley as a lone travel writer on a luxurious cruise liner who is convinced she has seen someone thrown overboard but can’t find any way of proving it. Veteran feelgood director Chris Columbus has taken on Richard Osman’s smash hit novel The Thursday Murder Club, with Helen Mirren, Celia Imrie, Ben Kingsley and Pierce Brosnan as the quirky residents in a British retirement community who with indomitable grit solve crimes that have left the uniformed police removing their helmets to scratch their heads.

    But heavy-hitter directors are also giving us films with a crime tinge. Darren Aronofsky has pivoted from the sensitive body-image themes of his previous film The Whale, to make Caught Stealing, based on the cult bestseller by Charlie Huston, with Austin Butler as a former baseball player in New York who gets mixed up with the city’s criminal underbelly.

    Paul Thomas Anderson is about to give us what promises to be a black comic paranoid fantasia on the subject of all sorts of crime, with One Battle After Another, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s novel Vineland.

    Perhaps the most startling auteur take on crime this autumn is Kelly Reichardt’s fascinating The Mastermind, starring Josh O’Connor. This famously quietist and realist film-maker has now created her own intriguing version of the heist drama. Ocean’s Eleven it isn’t, but in its intimate ordinariness, its unhurried ambient detail and moment-by-moment observational detail, is weirdly gripping. O’Connor plays an art school dropout and loser in 1960s Massachusetts who figures he can pay a couple of goons and a getaway driver to help him steal four paintings from a museum, having already established, in an unobtrusively nailbiting initial scene, that he can pinch objects from a glass cabinet without anyone noticing. But he winds up having to make a chaotic getaway himself.

    By way of contrast there is the grandiose brashness of Spike Lee, who offers his own defiantly personal take on Akira Kurosawa’s 1963 noir High and Low – pumping up the remake with superlatives in the title, Highest 2 Lowest – with Denzel Washington as a big-shot music producer whose godson is accidentally taken by kidnappers. A far-fetched suspense sequence set on a New York subway train has hints of that 70s crime classic The Taking of Pelham 123, and the pure chutzpah and sweep of the film is extremely enjoyable, though perhaps Japanese cinema purists will not like it.

    Grimy allure … Channing Tatum and Kirsten Dunst in The Roofman. Photograph: Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

    Derek Cianfrance is a director associated with romance and with realist emotional complexity, but he too has now succumbed to the grimy allure of true-crime with The Roofman, starring Channing Tatum as Jeffrey Manchester. In the 1990s, Manchester became a US pop-culture antihero in some quarters, dubbed “The Roofman” by the press for his habit of breaking into branches of McDonald’s through the roof in the dead of night, hiding in the lavatories, and then at opening time, emerging and robbing everyone. The movie promises to be part of that 90s-style black-comic variant of crime that is proving popular again.

    And quite aside from these single-issue prestige features, there is the return of Rian Johnson’s wildly popular crime movie series Knives Out, which gave Daniel Craig a returning franchise gig at the very moment he had stepped down from James Bond. He returns as droll detective Benoit Blanc in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery, which has a religious theme and the same sprightly tongue-in-cheek tone. The title might be a playful tribute to the courage of one of its actors: Jeremy Renner, making his first film since his near-death experience of being run over by a snowplough in 2023.

    Crime, it seems, is coming in many flavours.

    Crime Criminally Flick good highclass movies Return
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous Article‘It’s gruesome’: fears of grave-robbing amid rise in sale of human remains | Archaeology
    Next Article Best GoPro Camera (2025): Compact, Budget, Accessories
    onlyplanz_80y6mt
    • Website

    Related Posts

    AI techniques speed up forensic analysis of crucial crime scene larvae

    March 10, 2026

    The Guardian view on cancer survival rates: there is good news about healthcare amid the gloom | Editorial

    March 9, 2026

    The surprising science behind why daylight saving time is good for wildlife

    March 7, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Watch Lady Gaga’s Perform ‘Vanish Into You’ on ‘Colbert’

    September 9, 20251 Views

    Advertisers flock to Fox seeking an ‘audience of one’ — Donald Trump

    July 13, 20251 Views

    A Setback for Maine’s Free Community College Program

    June 19, 20251 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    At Chile’s Vera Rubin Observatory, Earth’s Largest Camera Surveys the Sky

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    SpaceX Starship Explodes Before Test Fire

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    How the L.A. Port got hit by Trump’s Tariffs

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Watch Lady Gaga’s Perform ‘Vanish Into You’ on ‘Colbert’

    September 9, 20251 Views

    Advertisers flock to Fox seeking an ‘audience of one’ — Donald Trump

    July 13, 20251 Views

    A Setback for Maine’s Free Community College Program

    June 19, 20251 Views
    Our Picks

    Florida Passes Bill to Promote AP Class Alternative

    Shifting tastes, shrinking sales: Napa Valley’s wineries adapt amid ‘shocking’ downturn | California

    Infertility: at a time when we need the right words, some are unable to find them | Nuala McGovern

    Recent Posts
    • Florida Passes Bill to Promote AP Class Alternative
    • Shifting tastes, shrinking sales: Napa Valley’s wineries adapt amid ‘shocking’ downturn | California
    • Infertility: at a time when we need the right words, some are unable to find them | Nuala McGovern
    • How One College Helps Students Navigate Civil Discourse
    • Should the bank of mum and dad pay university debts? | Student finance
    © 2026 naijaglobalnews. Designed by Pro.
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.