Last night my nephew and I returned to the Broadway for another double feature. We started with Caught Stealing, which is a movie that both of us were excited to see, and we really liked it! Henry "Hank" Thompson (Austin Butler) is a former baseball phenom whose life and career were derailed by a car accident that took the life of his friend. It is now 1998 and he is slumming as a bartender in New York City but still makes a point of cheering for the San Francisco Giants. When his punk-rock neighbor Russ (Matt Smith) asks him to watch his cat Bud when he is forced to return home to London, his girlfriend Yvonne (Zoe Kravitz) convinces him to do it even though he doesn't like cats. However, this brings him unwanted attention from two Russian mobsters (Yuri Kolokolnikov and Nikita Kukushkin), their Puerto Rican associate (Benito Martinez Ocasio, better known as Bad Bunny), and a narcotics detective (Regina King), who are all looking for the money Russ stole from two Hasidic drug dealers (Liev Schreiber and Vincent D'Onofrio) who are also looking for the money. Hank is beaten, bruised, and chased all over New York but, when his friends and family are threatened, he must finally reconcile his past (and rescue Bud). This thriller is a lot of fun with some humorous scenes involving a cat who bites, a perpetually annoyed neighbor (George Abud), a black and white cookie, a shabbos dinner (with Carol Kane), and the propitious use of a Giants hat but the tension keeps escalating with stakes that are much higher than I was expecting (the trailer is a bit misleading) because Hank has no idea what Russ has gotten him into or how to get himself out of the mess. There are some fantastic action sequences, particularly several spectacular chases and car crashes, with epic needle drops (my favorite was "Rock You Like a Hurricane" by the Scorpions). The ensemble cast is great, especially Schreiber and D'Onofrio who play the most unlikely villains, but Butler is very impressive in both the action scenes and the more poignant moments. Darren Aronofsky is very hit or miss with me but I think this is probably his most entertaining movie and I highly recommend it.
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