Sialnya dan terbebani dengan utang, Emily terlibat dalam penipuan kartu kredit yang membawanya ke dunia kriminal di Los Angeles, yang akhirnya mengarah pada konsekuensi mematikan.
Trailer
Pemeran
Aubrey Plaza
Emily
Theo Rossi
Youcef
Bernardo Badillo
Javier
John Billingsley
Office Manager
Kim Yarbrough
Secretary
Kara Luiz
Bank Boss
Janice Sonia Lee
Becca
Wesley Han
Mike
Wyatt Barrios
Javier's Son
Megalyn Echikunwoke
Liz
Brandon Sklenar
Brent
Ben Rodgers
Jason
Ricarlo Flanagan
Mike
Amje Elharden
Robert
Jonathan Avigdori
Khalil
Victor Manso
Young Guy in Baseball Hat
Lamar Usher
Lamar
Roman Arabia
Security Guard
Mungkin Anda Juga Suka
Emily the Criminal
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The Perfect Couple
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The Sinner
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Komentar
10 Komentar
Aubrey Plaza finds herself permanently underemployed. She has the beginning of a design degree, but had to leave due to a felony aggravated assault charge and finds herself with no job prospects and a mountain of debt. She works part time for a food delivery service. Every attempt to find a better job collides with her criminal record. In exchange for taking on an extra shift in an emergency, one of her co-workers puts her in touch with some extra money in the form of Theo Rossi. He runs an operation getting people to buy goods with fraudulent credit cards which he then sells on the black market. Plaza does so well that she soon graduates to bigger opportunities, and soon Plaza and Rossi are running their own operation on the side. I really like this film. It very obviously comments on the economic hardships of our times, but uses it as a backdrop to tell a very typical crime story with a fascinating twist. There's a series of escalating incidents in the film suggesting that Plaza is more dangerous than she may initially seem, and the film quietly shifts from a story about an innocent person's corruption to a portrait of a possible psychopath. I've always liked Plaza and I don't think she's ever been better.
This is a really well-done film. Well written, edited... well paced. Heart breaking and heart warming. Challenges the audience, and provides a couple hours of tension and suspense.
Aubrey Plaza and Theo Rossi are Terrific Together in this drama and thriller rolled into one. Plaza shows great acting acumen as a "down on her luck" artist who becomes swept up in a crime spree to earn extra income. She is sweet, vulnerable, and relatable in this roll. She plays it really well. Rossi is terrific as her crime mentor. He plays a savvy non-violent criminal with a softer side. The film reminds me of another great film, Uncut Gems, in all the right ways. The acting is sharp. The Direction is first class. The Cinematography is very good. The movie is small in some senses. But it evokes many emotions- from anxiety to sadness, and more. This so worth watching for the performances alone.
Greetings again from the darkness. Aubrey Plaza proved during "Parks and Recreation", and most every role since, that she is nearly unmatched in her ability to deliver blistering one-liners. However, over the last few years, she has expanded her repertoire and has become a fascinating, multi-talented actress who is exciting to watch. The feature film debut of writer-director John Patton Ford provides the opportunity for Ms. Plaza to push her dramatic chops into the world of crime. She not only doesn't disappoint, she excels. Emily (Ms. Plaza) is a struggling gig worker delivering lunch orders to office buildings. She has $70,000 in student loan debt and an assault conviction on her record that blocks her from any "good" jobs. We see how that past haunts her in an interview, and it's also our first peek at her natural instinct to bow up and fight back in any situation she views as unjust. Emily is a Jersey girl living in L. A. with a bucket list that seems like a distant dream. One day a co-worker hooks her up with an opportunity to make $200 in one hour. Of course, the opportunity turns out to require her to do something illegal, but desperate times call for desperate measures. The 'training' class is run by Youcef (Theo Rossi, "Sons of Anarchy"), a man with a gentle approach that disarms most attendees. Emily gets up to leave, but an exchange with Youcef (and a need for money) convinces her to stay and partake of the ridiculously easy money to be made from credit card fraud. The 'dummy shopper' approach can only go so far, and Youcef mentors Emily to take more risk for more reward. Additionally, their relationship escalates causing consternation from Youcef's brother Khalil (Jonathan Avigdori), who points out that Emily is not the best at following rules, which puts her and the entire operation in jeopardy. Liz (Megalyn Echikunwoke), Emily's friend from art school, finagles an interview for her at the big-time marketing firm where she works. Gena Gershon has one scene as the hiring manager, and Emily proves yet again that her interview skills are a bit lacking. Only this time she's chin deep in running crime with Youcef. One thing that is glossed over here, is that Emily surely has an advantage being an attractive white woman, while most of the others are people of color - automatically causing alert. Ms. Plaza and Mr. Rossi play off each other very well, but this is clearly her time to shine in a crime thriller. Although the story is actually very simple, and I'm not a fan of the ending, it's certainly fun to watch Aubrey Plaza spread her wings as an actor. Opening in theaters on August 12, 2022.
I think the reviews give you the overall gist of what this movie is all about but what's very striking, and entertaining is when Emily goes a little psycho. Not a ranting or dramatic psycho but a very focused, calculating one. Very solid performance, and the co-lead is a very good complement. If you liked Atomic Blonde, Anna, Salt and any other strong female lead that refuses to let the world get the better of them, you'll like this one.
This is a very engaging movie. Plaza is good, and Rossi, as her mentor in crime, is even better. They have a good chemistry together, which makes all the difference. Her initial state --- student debt, no good job available, shared housing, etc. -- makes her desperation for something else understandable. Her step-by-step descent into crime feels credible, as do the details of the criminal schemes themselves. Well worth watching.
Emily the Criminal stands next to Maverick for the best thriller of the year. That's because of Aubrey Plaza, who plays the anti-hero for our times The eponymous bad girl of the Sundance breakout Emily the Criminal is as much a victim of society's neglect as she is of her own self-centeredness. Yet Emily (Aubrey Plaza) is self-sufficient and capable of kicking serious butt, not in a professional, martial-arts way, but in a way that mirrors her determination. It's not difficult to see why she is easily seduced from food-delivery work to credit card scamming given the $70K in school loans, half a degree, and her permanent record of aggravated assault and DUI. The clarity and tension with which writer/director John Patton Ford unfolds Emily's arc are admirable--anyone in the audience can immediately identify with her dilemma-to remain poor or to make enough to erase debt and live comfortably. Emily's only real friend is her old college chum, Liz (Megalyn Echikunwoke), who gets her an ad-agency interview with a mean womansplaining exec (Gina Gershon) that serves as the last testament to what Emily will suffer for every job she interviews: facing her criminal record and being offered, in this case, an internship for almost a half year without pay. Hooking up with an enterprise that scams credit cards is almost a given; hooking up with the middle manager, Yusuf (Theo Rossi), is also a given, given that he is handsome, charming, and warm hearted. The drama actually comes alive when she begins scamming, showing a natural talent and aggressive enough, unlike other modern heroines, to escape by wit or just smarts with the help of a taser or boxcutters. Throughout Emily the Detective, Plaza plays a decent millenial who has been buffeted by fate and her own stern affect to find salvation in accelerating crime, for which she has talent. Emily is not really the criminal that Yusuf's colleagues are; rather she's a bright woman caught in a social satire both trenchant and scary. You'll love Plaza in this role. Just pray she can move from her deadpan characters to a variety of strong women. Like Ryan Gosling in Drive, she's impossible to ignore. She's that good.
