What the movie actually is
Forget a straight-up heist movie — this one treats robbery like performance art. A ragtag crew pulls bank jobs and films everything, turning their crimes into shareable content and dare-you-to-try-it challenges for the internet age.
Trailer highlights (aka the stuff that makes you rewind)
The teaser throws you into the action with fast-cut footage of the crew livestreaming their capers. They don’t just pocket cash and vanish — they flaunt their work online, mock banks a little, and even hand out some of their haul to people they meet. It’s equal parts bragging and chaos.
The cat-and-mouse plot
Of course, flashing your face while committing felonies attracts attention. An FBI investigator takes notice and ropes in a brilliant hacker who can find ghosts online. Together they sniff out clues and start to worry the crew might be planning one huge, showstopping job.
Who’s involved behind and in front of the camera
David Leitch — yes, the action mastermind behind hits like Deadpool 2, Bullet Train and The Fall Guy — directs. The script comes from Mark Bianculli. On-screen, expect Nicholas Hoult, Anna Sawai, Pete Davidson and Rhenzy Feliz as the crooks, with John C. Reilly playing the FBI agent and Zoë Kravitz as the hacker.
Tone and takeaways
It looks like Leitch mixing slick action with a wink at our obsession with viral fame. The movie seems to balance adrenaline and comedy — imagine heists, internet stunts, and a couple of awkwardly unclothed moments or risqué gags played for laughs rather than heat.
Should you care?
If you like fast-paced set pieces and films that poke fun at social media grandstanding, this one might be your jam. It’s action-forward but smart enough to riff on why people perform for likes — and what happens when a stunt becomes a crime spree.
When to watch
Mark your calendar for fall — the film arrives this season, with a September 9 opening in France. Keep an eye out for a wider release soon after.
