July 9, 2021
AP â Curt Goynes, a two-bit criminal just out of jail, needs cash and lands a seemingly easy payday at the beginning of
No Sudden Move. All he has to do is detain a family in their home at gunpoint for three hours and then he can walk away with USD5,000. It’s 1954 in Detroit and that sounds like a easy job.
Except this is a noir crime flick from director Steven Soderbergh and that means nothing is easy except perhaps some double-crossing, triple-crossing and, befitting an Olympic year, the very difficult quadruple-cross with a twist.
Trust no one in
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Curt Goynes, a two-bit criminal just out of jail, needs cash and lands a seemingly easy payday at the beginning of “No Sudden Move.” All he has to do is detain a family in their home at gunpoint for three hours and then he can walk away with $5,000. It’s 1954 in Detroit and that sounds like a easy job. Except this is a noir crime flick from director Steven Soderbergh and that means nothing is easy except perhaps some double-crossing, triple-crossing and, befitting an Olympic year, the very difficult quadruple-cross with a twist. Trust no one in “No Sudden Move,” a hard-boiled, ever-expanding con that rises from the ragged streets to the stately boardrooms of conspiratorial Big Auto and the corrupt police precincts of the Motor City.
By MARK KENNEDY
AP Entertainment Writer
Curt Goynes, a two-bit criminal just out of jail, needs cash and lands a seemingly easy payday at the beginning of âNo Sudden Move.â All he has to do is detain a family in their home at gunpoint for three hours and then he can walk away with $5,000. It s 1954 in Detroit and that sounds like a easy job.
Except this is a noir crime flick from director Steven Soderbergh and that means nothing is easy except perhaps some double-crossing, triple-crossing and, befitting an Olympic year, the very difficult quadruple-cross with a twist.
Trust no one in âNo Sudden Move,â a hard-boiled, ever-expanding con that rises from the ragged streets to the stately boardrooms of conspiratorial Big Auto and the corrupt police precincts of the Motor City. It s sort of a âChinatown for Detroit.