‘Crime 101’ Review: Chris Hemsworth Channels Steve McQueen in This Slow-Burn Heist Thriller
Photo Credit: Amazon MGM Studios
A polished, character-driven crime thriller that embraces restraint, precision, and old-school movie-star cool to anchor a film that prioritizes tension and consequence over spectacle.
There’s a particular kind of crime thriller that used to dominate late-night cable in the early 1990s — sleek but grounded, morally murky yet disciplined, powered less by bombast than by presence. Crime 101 feels like it belongs squarely in that lineage. And I mean that as the highest compliment.
Bart Layton’s adaptation of Don Winslow’s novella doesn’t attempt to reinvent the genre. It refines it. This is a patient, character-first thriller that understands the pleasures of watching smart people maneuver through carefully constructed systems — and the even greater pleasure of watching those systems inevitably collapse.
At the center is Chris Hemsworth’s Davis, a meticulous jewel thief who operates under a strict personal code. Hemsworth, long associated with mythic spectacle and larger-than-life heroics, delivers his most restrained performance in years. He sheds superhero swagger and leans into stillness. Every movement feels calculated. Every glance carries intention. There’s a clear nod to Steve McQueen here — not as mimicry, but as tonal influence. Davis doesn’t posture. He occupies space.
The film’s title refers to the California penal code designation for high-value jewel theft, but it also gestures toward the freeway choreography that defines Davis’ method. His robberies are precise, informed by insider knowledge and executed with surgical calm. Layton stages these sequences with admirable clarity. The tension isn’t derived from chaos or shaky camerawork; it’s built from timing, anticipation, and the understanding that one misstep would unravel everything.
Photo Credit: Amazon MGM Studios
Opposite Davis is Mark Ruffalo’s Lou, a veteran LAPD detective who looks permanently disheveled but thinks several steps ahead. Ruffalo plays him with a quiet, almost Columbo-like persistence. Lou is the only cop who sees the pattern connecting the robberies, but convincing his superiors proves harder than tracking the thief. In another film, this would be a standard cat-and-mouse dynamic. Here, it’s more layered. Lou isn’t just chasing Davis — he’s chasing the truth in a system increasingly disinterested in nuance.
Halle Berry stars as Sharon in CRIME 101 Photo Credit Merrick Morton
Halle Berry gives one of her strongest performances in years as Sharon, a high-level insurance executive navigating both professional stagnation and existential frustration. Berry plays Sharon not as a femme fatale or a narrative accessory, but as a fully realized participant in the ecosystem. She’s sharp, observant, and acutely aware of how quickly her value is depreciating in a corporate culture that prizes youth and optics over loyalty. Her eventual entanglement with Davis feels less like seduction and more like mutual recognition — two professionals testing the limits of their respective systems.
Then there’s Barry Keoghan, who detonates into the film with feral unpredictability. His character — bleach-blond, dirt-bike-riding, barely contained — injects a pulse of volatility into an otherwise controlled narrative. Keoghan doesn’t simply chew scenery; he destabilizes it. The film’s slow-burn tension spikes whenever he appears, reminding us that crime stories are never truly orderly.
Barry Keoghan stars as Ormon in CRIME 101. Photo Credit_ Merrick Morton
Layton juggles these intersecting arcs with confidence. The narrative threads — theft, investigation, corporate compromise, romantic hesitation — weave into each other in ways that occasionally strain plausibility. Los Angeles sometimes feels improbably small, with characters circling each other through coincidence more than probability. But the film’s craftsmanship mitigates these concerns. Even when the stitching shows, the fabric is rich enough to hold.
Erik Alexander Wilson’s cinematography gives the film its glossy, modern-noir sheen. Los Angeles is rendered not as sun-drenched fantasy but as a city of glass towers, dim interiors, and endless freeways — beautiful but isolating. The camera lingers on negative space, allowing tension to accumulate in silence. Blanck Mass’ electronic score hums beneath the surface, restrained yet propulsive, reinforcing the film’s commitment to mood over spectacle.
At two hours and twenty minutes, Crime 101 undeniably stretches its material. Certain subplots — particularly Davis’ tentative attempt at genuine romance — feel more exploratory than essential. But they serve a thematic purpose. Davis is a man who has mastered systems yet struggles with intimacy. His criminal precision doesn’t translate to emotional fluency. The film’s length allows these contradictions to breathe.
What ultimately distinguishes Crime 101 is its refusal to indulge in empty escalation. There are no gratuitous set pieces designed solely for trailer impact. No sudden tonal pivots to manufacture shock. Instead, the film trusts in inevitability. Actions have consequences. Choices narrow options. By the time the third act arrives, the characters aren’t surprised by where they’ve landed — and neither are we. That inevitability is deeply satisfying.
Chris Hemsworth stars as Davis in CRIME 101. PHOTO COURTESY OF AMAZON MGM STUDIOS
The Steve McQueen comparison isn’t just aesthetic. It’s philosophical. McQueen’s best roles were defined by restraint — by the tension between control and vulnerability. Hemsworth taps into that duality here. Davis projects calm competence, but the cracks are visible. Fear creeps in. Doubt lingers. Hemsworth plays those shifts subtly, letting them register without overt signaling.
Ruffalo matches him with a performance that grows in confidence as the film progresses. Lou’s dogged persistence could have felt repetitive, but Ruffalo layers in dry humor and quiet intelligence. Berry, meanwhile, anchors the film’s moral gray area. Sharon’s decisions are neither purely selfish nor entirely noble. They’re human.
And that’s the word that keeps returning: human.
Davis (Chris Hemsworth, right) and Lou (Mark Ruffalo, left) in CRIME 101. Photo Credit: Dean Rogers
In a cinematic climate dominated by digital excess and franchise calculus, Crime 101 feels almost rebellious in its restraint. It’s a film about adults making complicated choices in environments shaped by ego, ambition, and fear. It respects its audience enough not to over-explain. It lets scenes linger. It allows tension to simmer.
Is it perfect? No. The plotting occasionally strains under its own ambition. The runtime tests patience. Some narrative turns feel engineered rather than organic. But these imperfections stem from overreach, not laziness. The film aims high — for texture, for scope, for resonance — and mostly succeeds.
POPULAR ON THE CINEMA GROUP
By the time the final scenes play out, there’s no grandiose twist, no operatic reversal. Just consequence. Each character arrives precisely where their choices have guided them. It’s the kind of ending that feels earned rather than imposed.
Crime 101 doesn’t redefine the heist thriller. It reminds you why the genre worked in the first place. Strong performances. Clear stakes. Atmosphere. Control. Consequence.
A slow burn, yes. But one that rewards patience.But there’s one that rewards patience. In the end, every character gets exactly what they deserve and desire, leading to an ending that turns their morals and intentions on their head.
Rating: ★★★★½
That’s a Wrap
|
Crime 101 [2026]
|
That’s a Wrap | Crime 101 [2026] |
“In an era dominated by excess, Crime 101 moves with patience and precision. Anchored by Chris Hemsworth’s Steve McQueen-caliber restraint and supported by a cast that understands tension beats noise, the film reclaims the heist thriller as a genre built on character and consequence. Sleek, deliberate, and confident, it proves craft still leads.”
CREDITS
Release date: Friday, February 13
Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Barry Keoghan, Monica Barbaro, Corey Hawkins, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Nick Nolte, Halle Berry
Director-screenwriter: Bart Layton
Studio: Amazon MGM Studios
Run Time: 2 hours 20 minutes
Rated R,





