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Monday, October 13, 2025

MOVIE REVIEW: ROOFMAN

 






















After escaping from prison, former soldier and professional thief Jeffrey Manchester finds a hideout inside a Toys "R" Us, surviving undetected for months while planning his next move. However, when Jeffrey falls for a divorced mom, his double life starts to unravel, setting off a compelling and suspenseful game of cat and mouse as his past closes in.

Director: Derek Cianfrance

Cast: Channing Tatum, Kirsten Dunst, Ben Mendelsohn, LaKeith Stanfield, Juno Temple, Melonie Diaz, Uzo Aduba, Lily Collias, Jimmy O. Yang,  Peter Dinklage

Release Date: October 10, 2025 

Genre: Biography, Crime, Drama, History, Music, Romance

Rated R for language, nudity and brief sexuality.

Runtime: 2h 6m

Review:

Roofman takes a stranger than fiction true story and turns it into an engaging crime/romantic comedy that leans heavily on Channing Tatum's charisma and chemistry with an understated but layered turn from Kirsten Dunst.  Derek Cianfrance's film is disarmingly charming from the start as we get a quick rundown of the Jeffrey Manchester's Roofman crimes that land him in jail initially.  Tatum's voice oversets him up as a loveable rogue who's more of a victim of circumstance than an outright criminal.  It works for the most part as you need to like Jeffrey's inventive outlaw in order for the film to work as well as it does.  There are echoes of 2001's Blow and 2002's Catch Me If You Can as the audience is swept up in the character's increasingly precarious house of cards that's destined to fall at any moment.  There's a pervasive sense of optimism as the character that Tatum's Manchester encounters are mostly trusting and inviting at nearly every turn.  Kirsten Dunst injects a constant sense of trepidation to her single mother even as her character falls in love with Tatum's Manchester.  There's a subtly to her performance that's impressive across the board as she communicates a hefty amount of emotional information with a look that gives you the sense that's she's just waiting for the other shoe to drop.  Her character has an impressive level of depth that’s sorely lacking from some of the other supporting players who are much more broadly written, wasting the talents of the film's excellent supporting cast made up of Ben Mendelsohn, LaKeith Stanfield, Juno Temple, Uzo Aduba and Peter Dinklage.  Thankfully, Dunst and Tatum share an authentic chemistry together which serves as the film's beating heart, making the film's closing act more somber, almost tragic as the roof begins to fall in around them.  While the film doesn't absolve its central character of all the blame, he does get a decent level of cinematic sheen that glosses over the amount of emotional damage he left in his wake.  Roofman may be a bit too forgiving of its central subject but it does offer Channing Tatum a chance to really showcase his acting chops in a way we haven't seen before.  

B+

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