O ex-jogador de beisebol Hank Thompson se envolve em uma perigosa luta pela sobrevivência em meio ao submundo do crime da Nova York dos anos 90, forçado a navegar em um submundo traiçoeiro q... Ler tudoO ex-jogador de beisebol Hank Thompson se envolve em uma perigosa luta pela sobrevivência em meio ao submundo do crime da Nova York dos anos 90, forçado a navegar em um submundo traiçoeiro que ele nunca imaginou.O ex-jogador de beisebol Hank Thompson se envolve em uma perigosa luta pela sobrevivência em meio ao submundo do crime da Nova York dos anos 90, forçado a navegar em um submundo traiçoeiro que ele nunca imaginou.
Avaliações em destaque
If you watch the movies of Darren Aronofsky ("Black Swan", and "The Wrestler") you know that they are often dark and look at the bad things of life. With this entry "Caught Stealing" set in late 1998 in New York City, it's a deep dive into a scary and complex underworld, where no one is whom them seem. Ex baseball player Hank(Austin Butler) who's now down on his luck and earning a living behind the bar and not the plate, and his life changes drastically all of a sudden one day when he's given a cat, soon he has a group of criminals hot on his tail. Thru it all no one is whom or what they seem as the film takes twist and turns with action, car chases, and blood and violence. The wild card character of the film is shady police detective Roman(the super great Regina King). The movie has also some funny moments and Hank has plenty of flashbacks of pain, sugar and spice and plenty of eye candy is given from Zoe Kravitz as she gives a sexy turn with her time on screen as Hank's sexy exotic girl Yvonne(loved the scenes of her in that orange/ red colored like bra, and the nipple rings were A okay!). Overall this may not be a classic from Darren still it's an entertaining thrill ride that after plenty of crashes ends with a man and his cat who have clawed the way to a new life to live happily ever after!
This film was incredibly pacy and action packed. The story was terrific, the cast was amazing, and the performances were excellent.
Austin Butler delivered a superb performance. Ever since I saw him in Elvis, The Bikeriders, and most of all Dune: Part Two, he has become one of my favourite actors right now. His acting style is just so unique and special compared to what we usually see today. This film is another great addition to his filmography, and another great director that he's worked with. Zoë Kravitz, Matt Smith, Regina King, Vincent D'Onofrio, Liev Schreiber, and Benito Martínez Ocasio were all superb as well.
One of my favourite parts about this film is the character development that the protagonist goes through. He is a very different person at the beginning of the film compared to the end of the film.
Overall, this was a terrific film and a very enjoyable watch.
"If you can't bite, don't show your teeth."
Austin Butler delivered a superb performance. Ever since I saw him in Elvis, The Bikeriders, and most of all Dune: Part Two, he has become one of my favourite actors right now. His acting style is just so unique and special compared to what we usually see today. This film is another great addition to his filmography, and another great director that he's worked with. Zoë Kravitz, Matt Smith, Regina King, Vincent D'Onofrio, Liev Schreiber, and Benito Martínez Ocasio were all superb as well.
One of my favourite parts about this film is the character development that the protagonist goes through. He is a very different person at the beginning of the film compared to the end of the film.
Overall, this was a terrific film and a very enjoyable watch.
"If you can't bite, don't show your teeth."
- Bubbe.
Saw this in theaters in France, movie came out earlier there.
A good crime thriller! Personally it's not something we haven't seen before, there are tons of good crime movies, but honestly the characters, cinematography and the humor, not forget the performances make this movie stand out.
It's extremely violent tho, gritty and darker than advertised, and if you're fan of Aronofsky's work, this will certainly not disappoint you. It's an amazing film and he really captures his own style. No matter the genre.
For me the best crime we've gotten this year.
A good crime thriller! Personally it's not something we haven't seen before, there are tons of good crime movies, but honestly the characters, cinematography and the humor, not forget the performances make this movie stand out.
It's extremely violent tho, gritty and darker than advertised, and if you're fan of Aronofsky's work, this will certainly not disappoint you. It's an amazing film and he really captures his own style. No matter the genre.
For me the best crime we've gotten this year.
Caught Stealing is a wild, almost slapstick crime thriller that feels like a Coen Brothers movie set in the gritty, pre-gentrification New York of the late '90s. I loved how the film captured the city's vibe, from the seedy bars to the run-down apartments.
Austin Butler does a great job grounding the chaos with his "wrong place, wrong time" character. But honestly, the standout for me was the cat, Bud. It's a hilarious and surprisingly important part of the story, and the animal acting is a highlight.
I went in expecting another dark psychological drama and came out thoroughly entertained by a fast-paced and witty caper.
Austin Butler does a great job grounding the chaos with his "wrong place, wrong time" character. But honestly, the standout for me was the cat, Bud. It's a hilarious and surprisingly important part of the story, and the animal acting is a highlight.
I went in expecting another dark psychological drama and came out thoroughly entertained by a fast-paced and witty caper.
Essentially a throwback to pulpy 90s thrillers, Darren Aronofsky's 'Caught Stealing (2025)' is the kind of mid-budget, character-driven, star-studded movie they just don't make anymore. To be clear, they don't make these anymore not because they can't (or because "everything's too PC these days", which it honestly isn't - I mean, just look at the US President), but because they've created an environment in which this sort of thing just isn't viable. "They", of course, refers to the Hollywood studios who have basically split the marketplace into uber-expensive blockbusters and uber-cheap indie flicks with nothing in-between, pushed IP above talent or star power, decided that only certain types of film play in the cinema for the appropriate amount of time, and constantly wonder where they went wrong and why they keep losing money on tentpole pictures that make over $100 million dollars but still can't recuperate their mammoth production budgets. Regardless of the reasons it's so rare, it's lovely to see something like this on the big screen, a narrative so unconcerned with sequels or cameos that can afford to be lean, mean and relatively unpredictable. This New York-set novel adaptation sizzles with a punky energy that's only outmatched by its delightfully irreverent end credits (if the movie itself had even half the scream-in-your-face intensity of its scrolling end sequence, it would surely be one of the most intense Hollywood movies in recent years). Anchored by a surprisingly 'normal man' performance from Austin Butler, who grounds what constantly threatens to be a ridiculous narrative and acts as an emotional lifeline for the far zanier actors he's surrounded by, the feature sprints forward at its own self-assured pace and forces you to chase it, leaving a bloody trail of named-character bodies in its wake and barely taking a second to acknowledge the dangerous zig-zagging route it takes you on. With an unwieldly tone but a steady hand, the film remains engaging and enjoyable for its majority. It feels like it wants to primarily be fun, but it's actually quite gruelling in its own way because it's incredibly violent, bleak and coated in an almost tangible layer of dirt that reflects its atmosphere and setting. It is entertaining, for sure, but it's never as much of a flippantly callous blast as it seems to think it is. It's too mean to be unmitigated fun, but it's zippy and zesty and especially well-made for the kind of souped-up B-movie it ultimately is. It's a really good effort, one that feels like a throwback both in its period setting and in its overall vibe. It's a bit of a weird one for Aronofsky to do, but it proves that he's ultimately just a film fan like the rest of us. Not everything needs to have thematic weight or a specific point, nor does it need to push the boundaries of style or feel wholly unique. Sometimes it's okay to be caught stealing from the past, to create something that doesn't blow the world away but would have been steadily rented from Blockbuster nevertheless. This is an entertaining experience from beginning to end, and it's surprisingly refreshing considering how basic it undeniably is. It's actually pretty great.
How Darren Aronofsky Nailed '90s NYC in 'Caught Stealing'
How Darren Aronofsky Nailed '90s NYC in 'Caught Stealing'
Austin Butler, Zöe Kravitz, Regina King, Matt Smith, and director Darren Aronofsky talk with IMDb about how Aronofsky's forensic level of detail helped shape their characters and the vibrant world in Caught Stealing.
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- CuriosidadesBud the cat is played by Tonic, a film set pro who was "a rock star on Day 1," according to screenwriter Charlie Huston. Tonic's trainer, Melissa Millett, ran two training sessions with Austin Butler, teaching him how and when to feed Tonic to get the right actions from him. "Austin is an incredible cat trainer," says Millett. "He was very, very good at being a partner, being a team and leaving space for us with everything that was going on." One moment that impressed both Huston and director Darren Aronofsky involved Tonic's inspecting Butler after his character has just suffered an intense beating. "I have no idea why Tonic was doing that at the time or if Tonic might have been checking it out," Aronofsky says. "I kept playing that over and over again when I got those dailies because I was like, 'Look at this brilliant cat.' ... I would work with Tonic in a second again over many human actors."
- Erros de gravaçãoIn Hank's room, above the bed, you can see a "stolen" NYC subway sign featuring the "W" line. The "W" label for this alternate "N" line was first used in 2001, 3 years after the time the film is set.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosThe scrolling credits change direction (bottom to top, side to side, sideways) in sync with the credits song.
- Trilhas sonorasDoom
Written and performed by Idles
Produced by Mark Bowen and Joseph Talbot
Courtesy of Partisan Records
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Caught Stealing
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 10.540.000
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 7.850.000
- 31 de ago. de 2025
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 15.557.337
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 47 min(107 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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