FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

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コート・スティーリング
コート・スティーリング

コート・スティーリング

20251h 47m★ 6.9犯罪スリラーコメディ

あらすじ

1998年、ニューヨーク。メジャーリーグのドラフト候補になるほど将来有望だったものの、運命のいたずらによって夢破れた若者・ハンク。バーテンダーとして働きながら、恋人のイヴォンヌと平和に暮らしていたある日、変わり者の隣人・ラスから突然ネコの世話を頼まれる。親切心から引き受けたのもつかの間、街中のマフィアたちが代わる代わる彼の家へ殴り込んでは暴力に任せて脅迫してくる悪夢のようなの日々が始まった! やがてハンクは、自身が裏社会の大金絡みの事件に巻き込まれてしまったことを知る──が、時すでに遅し! 警察に助けを求めながら戦々恐々と逃げ続けていたある日、ついに大きな悲劇が起こる。理不尽な人生に堪忍袋の緒がブチギレたハンクは、一念発起して自分を巻き込んだ隣人やマフィアたちにリベンジすることを決意する──!

作品考察・見どころ

本作の真髄は、暴力的な疾走感と皮肉なユーモアが織りなす、類を見ない「静と動」のコントラストにあります。主演のオースティン・バトラーが放つ、追い詰められた人間の危うさと剥き出しの熱量、そしてレジーナ・キングら豪華キャストとのスリリングな演技合戦は圧巻。一瞬の油断も許さない極限状態の演出が、観る者のアドレナリンを限界まで沸騰させます。 単なる犯罪劇を超え、運命の不条理と人間の生存本能を鋭く抉り出すメッセージ性は、鑑賞後も消えない衝撃を残します。都会の狂気に飲み込まれながらも、絶望の淵でこそ輝く「生への執着」をどう捉えるか。スタイリッシュな映像美で描かれる人間の脆さと強靭さは、あなたの感性を激しく揺さぶる至高の映画体験を約束してくれるでしょう。

興行成績

製作費: $40,000,000 (60億円)

興行収入: $32,703,294 (49億円)

推定収支: $-7,296,706 (-11億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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キャスト

オースティン・バトラー
オースティン・バトラー
Hank Thompson
レジーナ・キング
レジーナ・キング
Detective Roman
ゾーイ・クラヴィッツ
ゾーイ・クラヴィッツ
Yvonne
Matt Smith
Matt Smith
Russ
リーヴ・シュレイバー
リーヴ・シュレイバー
Lipa
ヴィンセント・ドノフリオ
ヴィンセント・ドノフリオ
Shmully
グリフィン・ダン
グリフィン・ダン
Paul
Никита Кукушкин
Никита Кукушкин
Pavel
ユーリー・コロコリニコフ
ユーリー・コロコリニコフ
Aleksei
バッド・バニー
バッド・バニー
Colorado

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ダーレン・アロノフスキー

脚本: Charlie Huston

音楽: Rob Simonsen

制作: Ari Haas / ダーレン・アロノフスキー / Ari Handel

撮影監督: マシュー・リバティーク

制作会社: Protozoa Pictures / TSG Entertainment / Columbia Pictures

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Manuel São Bento
Manuel São Bento
★ 7

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/caught-stealing-review/ "Caught Stealing is the kind of cinema that provokes reactions. Darren Aronofsky once again demonstrates that he's a master of creating experiences that don't digest easily and continue to echo long after the credits roll. Austin Butler delivers an unforgettable performance, charged with magnetism and intensity, capable of elevating every scene to a rare level of authenticity. While some narrative choices are less satisfying, they don't diminish the value of a film that remains an emotionally devastating, compelling journey into the heart of a man torn apart by life. It's an imperfect but powerful story, one that deserves to be seen and discussed with the same passion Aronofsky pours into every project." Rating: B+

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 6

When filmmakers seek to stretch their creative juices by working on projects that aren’t typical of their normal output, they need to get their ducks in a row first if they hope to succeed in these new ventures. In tackling such productions, some have brilliantly broadened their ranges, while others have regrettably failed miserably. Rarely, however, do they fall somewhere in the middle, but such is the case with director Darren Aronofsky’s latest, a comedy/crime thriller that gets some things right and others not so much. Set in 1998, the picture follows the story of a once-promising baseball prospect, Hank Thompson (Austin Butler), whose chances of going pro were ruined by a severe knee injury, forcing him to settle for a routine job as a New York City bartender. It may not be everything he hoped for, but it pays the bills and provides him with a steady supply of his other passion, alcohol. However, his relatively mundane life takes a bizarre left turn one night when his shady, punked-out neighbor, Russ (Matt Smith), asks him to babysit his cat when a family emergency calls him home to London. It’s a favor that unwittingly draws Hank into the underbelly of his neighbor’s sordid, crime-ridden life. And, before he knows it, Hank is unexpectedly caught up in a web of theft, murder, mayhem and crooked cops, leaving him surrounded by an array of corpses and impending threats, with all implications pointing toward him as the perpetrator. He’s thus forced to take desperate measures to stay alive and ahead of the law, all the while struggling to protect his feline companion. The premise here is an intriguing one that gets progressively better as the film unfolds. However, it’s somewhat slow to start and features a profoundly dark narrative in the opening act, leaving one to wonder where the alleged comedy of this offering lurks. As the picture progresses, though, the promised (and often-inspired) humor gradually emerges, providing the much-needed comic relief called for to offset the story’s more sinister and decidedly edgier aspects. This welcome development genuinely helps to save the film from itself, a change in tone that’s significantly enhanced by a coterie of colorful supporting characters superbly portrayed by an excellent ensemble featuring the likes of Regina King, Liev Schreiber, Vincent D’Onofrio, Griffin Dunne, Carol Kane, George Abud, and, of course, Tonic the cat. The film also offers up a fine re-creation of life in 1990s New York down to the finest of details. When these elements are considered collectively, it’s easy to see how the director’s efforts at expanding his vision hit the mark on some points and not on others. In that regard, this offering shows the filmmaker’s promise for tackling projects beyond his typical fare, but a few more ducks need to fall into line before he can truly claim success when embarking on ventures into new territory.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

When “Russ” (Matt Smith) asks his bartending, hard-living, pal “Hank” (Austin Butler) to mind his cat whilst he returns to London to look after his sickening dad, he’s narked but agrees. Little does he realise that “Russ” has been involved with some ne’er-do-wells in the city and so fairly swiftly “Hank” is having to develop an whole new pain threshold as first the Russians, then the Hebrews lay into him. The cops are soon involved and his paramedic girlfriend “Yvonne” (Zoë Kravitz) has to find new ways of stitching a wound - and all for what? “Hank” hasn’t a clue who they are, what they want, or where what they want might actually be? It’s only when the spikey-haired British geezer makes a reappearance that things might start to make some sense - but I wouldn’t bet on it! Now despite the fact that Butler is almost always being beaten up - often clad only in his Calvins - he manages to exude loads of charisma into this daft crime caper. Certainly, it plays fast and loose with medical science and serendipity does intervene once or twice more often than you could realistically expect, but it’s a solid action-adventure feature that is bloody, violent but still darkly entertaining. The scene-stealing Hasidic Hebrews (Liev Schreiber and Vincent D’Onofrio) won’t drive on the sabbath, but gun-toting? Well that appears to be allowed? There’s a manic enforcer who has traits reminiscent of an angry chimpanzee and there’s duplicity at every turn before a denouement that is fairly predictable, but nonetheless enjoyable to savour as the calamities accumulate and the initially gullible “Hank” discovers he and “John Wick” must be distant relatives. There’s a cat, and a bandage - but an American Humane Society disclaimer at the end, so clearly it can act too. It is a bit derivative but it doesn’t hang around and it shows us clearly than Butler isn’t just a pretty face.

misubisu
misubisu
★ 8

**Score: 8/10 — A Dark, Gritty, and Surprisingly Touching Neo-Noir** Darren Aronofsky's *Caught Stealing* is a welcome return to form a lean, mean, and unexpectedly funny crime thriller that proves the director hasn't lost his touch. Based on Charlie Huston's novel, it follows Hank Thompson (Austin Butler), a washed up former baseball prospect whose simple favour; watching his neighbour's cat, plunges him into a blood soaked war between Russian mobsters, Hasidic gangsters, and corrupt cops. What emerges is a film that **skillfully mixes tragedy and comedy**, never losing its balance even at its darkest. **The Tragidy/Comic Balance** The film's tonal tightrope walk is its greatest achievement. One moment you're wincing at brutal violence; the next, you're laughing at the absurdity of it all. Nowhere is this more evident than in the handling of Yvonne (Zoë Kravitz). Her character is warm, grounded, and deeply likeable, which makes her sudden, senseless execution all the more devastating. Yet the film's genius is that **when Yvonne is executed, and Hank has to get on with business**, the narrative doesn't wallow. It pushes forward, forcing both Hank and the audience to process grief while the chaos continues to escalate. This isn't callousness; it's the harsh reality of a world where sentiment is a luxury criminals can't afford. **A Very Well-Paced Story** At 105–107 minutes, *Caught Stealing* moves like a bullet train . Aronofsky and screenwriter Huston understand that the best thrillers aren't just about what happens, but how relentlessly it happens. The plot unfolds with a propulsive energy that never lets up, yet never feels rushed. Each new player from Matt Smith's punk-rock coward Russ to Vincent D'Onofrio and Liev Schreiber's memorably affable Hasidic gangsters—arrives with perfect timing, adding layers without overloading the narrative. **The Performances** Butler is a revelation. He embodies Hank's quiet desperation and hidden resilience with a lived-in authenticity that makes the absurd premise feel grounded . The supporting cast is uniformly excellent, with special mention to D'Onofrio and Schreiber, whose Lipa and Shmully are simultaneously terrifying and oddly endearing. Regina King brings steel as the crooked Detective Roman, and Bad Bunny's Colorado is a genuinely unsettling presence. **The Verdict** *Caught Stealing* is a satisfyingly sharp thriller that proves Aronofsky can do lean and mean as effectively as operatic and intense. It's violent, darkly hilarious, and unexpectedly poignant anchored by a star making turn from Butler and a script that knows exactly when to twist the knife and when to let you breathe. A very strong **8/10**. **Watch if:** You love Coen Brothers style dark comedies, gritty New York crime dramas, or simply want to see Austin Butler prove he's the real deal. **Skip if:** You're squeamish about sudden violence or prefer your thrillers with clean moral lines. This one lives in the grey.

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