post_page_cover

Hurry Monday | Film Threat

Apr 20, 2023

AVAILABLE ON AMAZON PRIME VIDEO ON DEMAND! Heist thrillers typically begin with planning the heist, during which the characters power through unanticipated complications. The third act is all about the fallout of the heist as the criminals contend with life-altering consequences. Hurry Monday, the indie thriller written and directed by Vaughn Christion, doesn’t follow suit and starts in medias res with the protagonist, Nedraphine “Nat” Ramos (Sofia Salgado), running away from two men in a car. A dramatic score and handheld camera movement coincide with Nat running, with decaying warehouses and empty parking lots being the perfect backdrop to imply an absence of help and safety.
After Nat is run over, the two men drag her body but are ambushed by David (Owen Hu), Nat’s longtime friend. A tightly choreographed fight erupts between David and the two men. Nat and David were double-crossed on a job to steal gems. She finds herself with the stolen gems but without David. Consequently, Nat must fence the gems while evading her former partners in crime.
Hurry Monday is, for the most part, an engaging crime thriller. The opening sequence is brisk and well-choreographed, reinforcing the risks involved with illicit activity. From this point forward, Nat is propelled down a path of perfidy, grief, and paranoia. While the action scenes following the opening sequence don’t match up, Sofia Salgado keeps you glued to the screen. She gives a riveting performance as an iron-willed, vigilant, and self-reliant thief venturing through the seedy underbelly. Despite knowing very little about Nat’s backstory and her processing of emotions, the actor’s deployment of unyielding stares and minatory inflections instills the character with poise, making it appear as if Nat has been conducting business with criminals for years.

“…Nat must fence the gems while evading her former partners in crime.”
As Nat reconnects with people from her past, there is a stagnant quality. The supporting actors aren’t as convincing as Salgado. A tense moment between Nat and a fitness trainer (Lorenza Bernasconi) feels abrupt; an easy fix would be adding more layers of mistrust to their interaction. But Nat does have good chemistry with Nate (Crawford Hazelwood), another longtime friend and her reliable source of all things crime.
Nat can usually take care of herself and knows her way around a knife and gun, but her desperation begins to cloud her judgment. Lucky for her, her ex-boyfriend Dale Matthews (Wesley Renard) is more than willing to assist her. Of course, Nat and Dale being near each other stir up past feelings. But the film could have gone without, as Nat is fascinating on her own.
Minus some inconsistencies in sound and editing, Christion sufficiently boasts the characteristics (low-key lighting, suspicious characters, sketchy meetups) and themes (betrayal and regret) of a crime picture. In addition, the filmmaker coaxes out a lived-in performance from Salgado and offers a few narrative surprises. In Hurry Monday, Christion had fun with the criminal antics and made good use of the New Jersey locales. When all’s said and done, this is an enjoyable contribution to the indie heist genre.
For screening information, visit Hurry Monday on the Film Freeway website.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants Review

It raised more than a few eyebrows when The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants was selected as a closing night film at AFI Fest. It made more sense within the screening’s first few minutes. Not because of the film itself, but the…

Feb 5, 2026

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Review: An Evolving Chaos

Although Danny Boyle started this franchise, director Nia DaCosta steps up to the plate to helm 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, and the results are glorious. This is a bold, unsettling, and unexpectedly thoughtful continuation of one of modern…

Feb 5, 2026

Olivia Wilde’s Foursome Is an Expertly Crafted, Bitingly Hilarious Game of Marital Jenga

If you've lived in any city, anywhere, you've probably had the experience of hearing your neighbors have sex. Depending on how secure you are in your own relationship, you may end up wondering if you've ever had an orgasm quite…

Feb 3, 2026

Will Poulter Is Sensational In An Addiction Drama That Avoids Sensationalizing [Sundance]

Despite all the movies made about addiction, the topic does not naturally lend itself to tidy cinematic narratives. (At least, when portrayed accurately.) While actors often visualize the condition of substance dependency through expressive physical outbursts, the reality of recovery…

Feb 3, 2026