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

Watch The Official Trailer For COPSHOP, Starring Gerard Butler And Frank Grillo – Only In Theatres September 17

From the director of NARC, THE GREY, A-TEAM and the recent BOSS LEVEL (HULU), Joe Carnahan, comes his latest film COPSHOP.

Tearing through the Nevada desert in a bullet-ridden Crown Vic, wily con artist Teddy Murretto (Frank Grillo) hatches a desperate plan to hide out from lethal hitman Bob Viddick (Gerard Butler): He sucker-punches rookie officer Valerie Young (Alexis Louder) to get himself arrested and locked up in a small-town police station. Jail can’t protect Murretto for long, and Viddick schemes his own way into detention, biding his time in a nearby cell until he can complete his mission. When the arrival of a competing assassin (Toby Huss) ignites all-out mayhem, mounting threats force Viddick to get creative if he wants to finish the job and escape the explosive situation.

Grillo and Butler are having way too much fun in this first trailer. Check it out now.

The film is produced by Mark Williams, Tai Duncan, Warren Goz, Eric Gold, Joe Carnahan, Frank Grillo, Gerard Butler, Alan Siegel, James Masciello and executive produced by Tom Ortenberg, Matthew Sidari, Scott Putman, Robert Simonds, Adam Fogelson, John Friedberg.

Carnahan and Grillo have joined forces to create their own production company, War Party. Follow them on Twitter https://twitter.com/warpartyfilms

The film will be in theaters September 17.

https://www.copshopmovie.com/

Gerard Butler stars as “Bob Viddick” in Joe Carnahan’s COPSHOP, an Open Road Films and Briarcliff Entertainment release. Credit : Kyle Kaplan / Open Road Films / Briarcliff Entertainment
Frank Grillo stars as “Teddy Murretto” in Joe Carnahan’s COPSHOP, an Open Road Films and Briarcliff Entertainment release. Credit : Kyle Kaplan / Open Road Films / Briarcliff Entertainment
Gerard Butler stars as “Bob Viddick” in Joe Carnahan’s COPSHOP, an Open Road Films and Briarcliff Entertainment release. Credit : Kyle Kaplan / Open Road Films / Briarcliff Entertainment
Alexis Louder stars as “Valerie Young” in Joe Carnahan’s COPSHOP, an Open Road Films and Briarcliff Entertainment release. Credit : Kyle Kaplan / Open Road Films / Briarcliff Entertainment

THE GREY – The Blu Review

The Movie: From the very first moments of THE GREY, there is a stark realization that the stark bleakness of the film’s setting is directly complimentary to the story being told. The cold, harsh, brutal weather of the northernmost wilderness sets the stage for a tragic journey of survival. Co-written and directed by Joe Carnahan (SMOKIN’ ACES, THE A-TEAM) and written by Ian MacKenzie Jeffers, the film is adapted from Jeffers’ short story entitled “Ghost Walker.”

THE GREY, at it’s most primal, is a story of man versus nature, but more specifically man versus beast, as a handful of oil workers who survive a place crash must battle the bitter cold and a relentless and hungry pack of wolves for survival. Led by Ottway, the group of men must comes to terms with each other and their own demons as they witness their own numbers gradually decline by the fangs of their canine counterparts. On this level, THE GREY is a terrifyingly horrific tale of a scenario far too easy to imagine in real life. On the other hand, THE GREY is a curiously uplifting human saga that carries with it a certain amount of triumph and epiphanal

Liam Neeson (TAKEN, UNKNOWN) plays Ottway, a poacher with a guilty conscience working security for an oil company in the great white north, tasked with keeping the savage wild wolves from making the workers their lunch. Ottway is an intelligent, tough and resourceful man. He is a peaceful man by nature, but not a man you’d want to make angry. Neeson gives Ottway a quiet intensity that defines the role, creating a character that an audience admires and cares about, despite his gruff demeanor. Neeson is an actor that can say as much with his face as he can with words and this role is no exception.

The group of survivors led by Ottway includes Diaz (Frank Grillo), Hendrick (Dallas Roberts), Flannery (Joe Anderson), Burke (Nonso Anozie), Hernandez (Ben Bray), Lewenden (James Badge Dale), and Talget (Dermot Mulroney). This small group of hardened men, some weak and some strong, clash as often as they unite in their combines struggle. Each of them have something to lose, something they long to return to, except for Ottway who seems resigned to imminent death, willing to let that fate overcome him if not for his ingrained sense of duty to ensuring the survival of the other men.

THE GREY is an extremely well written, well directed and well acted film, but a great injustice would be done if I were not to apply due emphasis on the look and sound of this fantastic film. Cinematographer Masanobu Takayanagi (WARRIOR) captures the Alaskan wild with unflinching realism, setting aside the more serene, peacefully dangerous depiction of films like INTO THE WILD for a barren, unruly landscape brutalized by blistering winds and blinding horizontal snowfall. Much of the most brutal weather depicted in THE GREY was captured on locations without the assistance of fans or special effects, a frightening thought in and of itself. The landscape becomes a character, another antagonist through the lens of a master cinematographer. Composer Marc Steitenfeld, whose work will soon be featured in Ridley Scott’s upcoming PROMETHEUS, indulges the audience with a score so fittingly bleak while also subtly emotional that it’s presence is as equally easy to overlook as it is significant to the film’s success. However, Carnahan understands the appropriate use of this tool when he chose to leave the music out of the mix during what is perhaps the best scene in the entire film.

While there is plenty of wilderness action, suspense and beastly terror, THE GREY shines most vividly in it’s most human moments. One of these moments is during Ottway’s reflection on his relationship with his father and a simple but powerful poem his father wrote for him as a boy. This poem carries a great deal of weight throughout the film. The other is perhaps one of the best, most realistic and thoughtful depictions of death as it occurs I have seen in many years on film. This moment takes place shortly after the plane crash occurs and offers a fascinating insight into Ottway and his perspective on life. Overall, THE GREY is as touching as it is frightening, it is as much a sad film as it is a testament to hope and personal strength. It is a film about the human will.

The Extras: THE GREY blu-ray doesn’t have a ton of special features, but what it does have proves to be worth watching. Hey, it’s better than nothing, which is hos far too many films gets packaged to blu-ray in a rush to capture home viewing sales. Start out your blu-ray experience by watching the film (of course) unless you saw THE GREY in the theater. If so, jump directly to the deleted scenes — six in total — where you’ll get a healthy serving of scenes cut from the finished film. These deleted scenes do not come with an optional commentary, however some of these scenes are actually addressed in the feature-length audio commentary.

The feature-length audio commentary for THE GREY is a good time, recorded with co-writer/director Joe Carnahan and editors Roger Barton and Jason Hellmann. From the very beginning, it’s clear that you’ll have a good time listening to these laid back filmmakers. Joe Carnahan shakes his glass of ice, pointing out that they’re enjoying some Scotch while recording the commentary and what follows is a string of interesting, often humorous, anecdotes and off-the-cuff remarks about the filmmaking process and those involved.

>>>>>>> MINOR SPOILERS BELOW <<<<<<<

One of the most interesting things gleaned from the audio commentary comes from Joe Carnahan, when he explains how after seeing the film, his wife suggests that Ottway (Liam Neeson) is the only survivor of the plane crash and the other survivors are merely facets of his own mind, projections of different aspects of his personality, whereas as not only is Ottway in a struggle against nature — the cold/the wolves — but, that he is also in a struggle with himself. Carnahan goes on to explain how he had never thought of this prior to his wife pointing this out, but that it had a significant affect on how he viewed his own film afterward. I have to agree, as I watched the film again after enjoying the commentary. Viewing the film with this concept in mind changes the experience and gives the film a noticeably different appeal, less focused on the action and suspense and allows the viewer to delve deeper into the philosophical implications of the story.

Finally, THE GREY blu-ray also touts the following “bonus features” as described by Universal:

  • UltraViolet
  • Digital Copy
  • U-Control w/ Picture-in-Picture
  • pocket BLU App
  • BD-Live

THE GREY 2-Disc Blu-Ray/DVD Combo pack hits store shelves on Tuesday, May 15th, 2012.

Overall Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

WAMG At THE GREY Press Day

Hey there kids! Melissa here, with another exciting tale for you…

(Insert Jazz Hands Here)

A few weeks ago, I was lucky enough to participate the the press junket for Liam Neeson’s new film THE GREY, where his character leads an unruly group of oil-rig roughnecks when their plane crashes into the remote Alaskan wilderness. Battling mortal injuries and merciless weather, the survivors have only a few days to escape the icy elements – and a vicious pack of rogue wolves on the hunt – before their time runs out.

So, for your listening pleasure… here are the roundtables from the day. TAHDAHHHHH!!

THE GREY Roundtable: Liam Neeson

THE GREY Roundtable: Dermot Mulroney & Dallas Roberts

THE GREY Roundtable: Frank Grillo & James Badge Dale

THE GREY Roundtable: Joe Carnahan

In THE GREY, Liam Neeson leads an unruly group of oil-rig roughnecks when their plane crashes into the remote Alaskan wilderness.  Battling mortal injuries and merciless weather, the survivors have only a few days to escape the icy elements – and a vicious pack of rogue woes on the hunt – before their time runs out.

 For more info check out THE GREY website: http://thegreythemovie.com/

THE GREY is in theaters now

Carnahan and Cooper Going GREY

Evidently, there is going to be a plan B for director Joe Carnahan and Bradley Cooper.  According to Variety, the two, who just finished a collaboration on this coming Summer’s THE A-TEAM, are in negotiations to re-team for THE GREY for Ridley and Tony Scott’s Scott Free.  The film would serve as a return of sorts to Carnahan directing one of his own scripts, this one a co-writing job with DEATH SENTENCE scribe Ian Jeffers.

The script concerns a group of survivors of a plane crash.  After crash landing in the wilderness, the group finds themselves hunted by a pack of wolves.  The screenplay is based on a short story by Jeffers and would be a bit of a change of pace for Carnahan who, until now, has handled strictly action fare.

The thriller looks to have a $34-million budget, and, in looking at the cast list of Carnahan’s films like SMOKIN’ ACES and THE A-TEAM, it would stand to reason there would be a lot more notable actors and actresses in THE GREY than just Cooper.  Carnahan is a man who can do a lot with a little budget.  SMOKIN’ ACES, alone, had only $17 million to work with, and the cast for that film was astounding.

DVD Giveaway: SMOKIN’ ACES 2: ASSASSIN’S BALL

The hit men and hit women are back, and this time, they’re having a ball.   SMOKIN’ ACES 2: ASSASSINS’ BALL hits DVD and Blu-Ray shelves across America today, and, in honor of these people busting caps all over each other, we have a couple of these bad boys to give away.

All you have to do is leave a comment below telling us, between this film and its predecessor, SMOKIN’ ACES, who your favorite character is and why.   Make it interesting.   Points will not be awarded to those saying, “Vinnie Jones, because he’s the Juggernaut, bitch!”   Really give us something to mull over.   The best answers will be picked and the DVDs will be sent.

And, if you aren’t lucky enough to get one of these puppies for free, you can certainly go out and pick up a copy.   SMOKIN’ ACES 2: ASSASSINS’ BALL hits stores today, January 19th.   Go to it, people.   The Juggernaut awaits.

I Love It When a First Official A-TEAM Shot Comes Together

a-team official header

Up until now, all we’ve seen from Joe Carnahan’s upcoming THE A-TEAM has been behind-the-scene shots from a distance, so imagine the grin from ear to ear today when this first, official shot of the film splashed around the net, courtesy of Dr. Malo.

There really is no denying how badass Liam Neeson is as Col. John “Hannibal” Smith, almost like he’s channelling Dolph Lundgren a bit with that blonde hair.   Bradley Cooper as Lt. Templeton “Faceman” Peck and Sharlto Copley as Capt. “Howling Mad” Murdock are also pretty stellar.   Hell, even the van back and to the side looks menacing.   The only real setback in this shot is Quinton Jackson as Sgt. Bosco “B.A.” Baracus, who looks mean enough, but he also looks just like Jackson with a mohawk.   Unfortunately, Mr. T is so welded to that role that it is going to take some actual footage for Jackson to win die-hard fans of the series over.

Here is the full shot, which you click on to supersize:

a-team official full

THE A-TEAM hits theaters on June 11th, 2010.

First Shots of ‘A-Team’ Van

a-team van5

Filming on Joe Carnahan’s big-screen adaptation of ‘The A-Team’ is just around the corner, and, today, we have our first shots of the famous, GMC van that will be used in the film.  From the looks of it, it’s just like on the show complete with red stripe, roof spoiler, and flood lights.  Splash News caught these shots on set while the crew was shooting a chase scene.

Check ’em all out:

a-team van1

a-team van2

a-team van3

a-team van4

a-team van6

a-team van7

‘The A-Team’ is set for release on June 11th, 2010.

Two More Join ‘A-Team’

sharlto copley district 9

There were rumors a few days ago floating around that ‘District 9’ star Sharlto Copley was being touted to drop into the role of helicopter pilot Capt. “Howling Mad” Murdock in the big screen adaptation of ‘The A-Team.’  Today, Variety confirms those reports, as they claim Copley is in final negotations to take the part that had been previously rumored for such high-ranking stars as Jim Carrey.  Copley joins the team that already includes Liam Neeson as Hannibal, Bradley Cooper as Faceman, and Quinton Jackson as B.A. Baracus.

Also joining the cast is Jessica Biel, who would be playing an ex-love of Faceman.  Joe Carnahan is directing from a screenplay by Skip Woods.  The film is set to begin production this fall in Vancouver.

Chris Pine Wants ‘A-Team’ Role

chris-pine

I remember seeing Chris Pine as Darwin Tremor in Joe Carnahan’s insane ‘Smokin’ Aces’ and thinking to myself, “This guy is gonna break out.” Â  Well, it’s happened. Â  Not only is he the lead in one of this Summer’s biggest blockbusters, he’s now throwing his name into the hats of other, big budget retreads.

Pine recently spoke with MTV where he revealed his desire to reteam with Carnahan on the feature film remake of ‘The A-Team.’

“The [film] that I’ve had the most fun on was this movie called ‘Smokin’ Aces’ that Joe Carnahan directed – the guy that did ‘Narc’ and now he’s doing ‘The A-Team,’† Pine told MTV. “I played a neo-Nazi redneck hitman, which is about the farthest thing from me you can get. It was the most fun I had, because it was such a character.†

As far as which ‘A-Team’ character Pine wants, there’s no question.

“Murdock is my man,† he revealed, saying he wants to create a “Howling Mad† character along the same lines as the insane ‘Smokin’ Aces’ performance Carnahan steered him into. “I love Murdock.†

Carnahan is currently working on ‘The A-Team’ script which has been quite the hot potato project in Hollywood these last few years. Â  This is the furthest anyone has gotten with actually bringing the film to completion, and, if ‘Star Trek’ does as well as everyone hopes, Pine will surely be able to step into any roles he wants.

Source: MTV