Triple 9 would very plainly like to be a crime epic. It is massively overstuffed, filling the screen with enough talented actors that it can snuff a few of them and ignore a couple more and still keep rolling. It gives equal time to criminals and cops
With director John Hillcoat's (Lawless) Triple 9 now in theaters, I recently sat down with Norman Reedus for an extended video interview. During our wide-ranging conversation he talked about working with the all-star cast, memorable moments from
Think Reservoir Dogs meets American Sniper meets Training Day meets just about any movie directed by Michael Mann and you have the recipe for Triple 9, a dark, gritty, terribly confusing but entertaining cops-and-robbers thriller that paints a very
Triple 9 would very plainly like to be a crime epic. It is massively overstuffed, filling the screen with enough talented actors that it can snuff a few of them and ignore a couple more and still keep rolling. It gives equal time to criminals and cops
Triple 9 would very plainly like to be a crime epic. It is massively overstuffed, filling the screen with enough talented actors that it can snuff a few of them and ignore a couple more and still keep rolling. It gives equal time to criminals and cops