Joe Carnahan’s The Rip is a muscular cop thriller anchored by Matt Damon and Ben Affleck in sharp form as Miami detectives drawn into a murder and a stash house loaded with millions. Carnahan keeps the tension taut and the dialogue biting, even if the third act leans on predictable turns. Strong performances and propulsive energy make it a solid Netflix entry and an effective way to kick off 2026.
The Rip Overview
The Rip opens with immediate tension. Miami-Dade Police Captain Jackie Velez is murdered by masked assailants during an investigation. Wounded and fading, she manages to send one final text to a burner phone. From there, the pressure only escalates.
Jackie’s death ignites chaos within the Tactical Narcotics Team she commanded. Every member becomes a suspect. Lieutenant Dane Dumars (Damon), her second-in-command, faces scrutiny from Major Thom Vallejo (Néstor Carbonell). Detective Sergeant JD Byrne (Affleck) is interrogated by his FBI brother Del (Scott Adkins). Rounding out the unit are the rigid Mike Ro (Steven Yeun), Numa Baptiste (Teyana Taylor), and single mother Lolo Salazar (Catalina Sandino Moreno).
After hours of interrogation, Dane receives a tip about a stash house in Hialeah. He persuades the team to investigate. What follows is a tense internal chess match. Loyalties fracture as questions mount over who called in the tip, who owns the house, and who played a role in Jackie’s murder. Sasha Calle, who turns up as the owner of a stash house, is excellent
Following Air, Damon and Affleck again prove electric together. Affleck’s JD is volatile and impulsive. Damon plays Dane as unnervingly calm and methodical. Their dynamic anchors the film. Taylor and Moreno bring charisma, though their roles remain underwritten.
Carnahan’s sharp dialogue, Juan Miguel Azpiroz’s moody cinematography and Kevin Hale’s propulsive editing sustain momentum. Cross-cutting gives the film an early urgency. While the second-act action excels, the third act loses clarity.
Strong performances and relentless tension elevate The Rip above standard Netflix fare, even as the story leans toward predictability.
The Rip is streaming on Netflix.
Damon and Affleck in The Rip
Damon and Affleck draw on decades of shared history to give Dane and JD a lived-in credibility The Rip depends on. Dane is endlessly watchable due to Damon’s affability and range. He invites trust even as he withholds information, turning calm into something quietly suspect. Affleck, meanwhile, delivers his strongest work since Gone Girl, grounding JD with volatile energy and emotional clarity.
On paper, the roles suggest easy conclusions. JD is the hothead. Dane is controlled and methodical. Carnahan smartly resists those expectations. Damon’s restraint never reads as innocence. His composure unsettles both JD and the audience. Affleck’s intensity, by contrast, could frame JD as reckless or jealous enough to kill. Instead, Affleck plays him as a cop driven by instinct and loyalty, not ego.
That balance is crucial. The Rip presents no shortage of viable suspects, each shaded with just enough ambiguity to sustain doubt. Yet Affleck’s performance is so grounded, that suspicion never truly sticks. The film may want you to question everyone, but JD never feels like a man capable of betraying his unit.
The Stash
When the Tactical Narcotics Team reaches the Hialeah house, they discover far more cash than Dane claims came through the tip line. The film briefly toys with the temptation to skim the take, but that moral question never becomes the central conflict.
The house belongs to Desiree “Desi” Molina’s grandmother (Calle). Wary of police, she reluctantly allows the team inside. Dane uncovers Desi’s past as a confidential informant and suspects she plans to claim a finder’s share of the recovery. Using her position at the center of the house, Dane deliberately feeds her false information to see what leaks.
The larger concern is ownership. No one knows who the money belongs to or when its owners will come looking. Protocol demands counting the cash on site, but millions are hidden inside the walls. The process would take hours. JD pushes to move the money first and delay calling “the rip” on Major Vallejo. Dane’s refusal to explain the tip’s origin, and his choice to stall the call, becomes the film’s primary source of tension—especially once the question of Jackie’s killer grows more predictable.
When Dane and JD realize the entire block belongs to a cartel, the threat seems external and immediate. A second-act twist undercuts that assumption. The cartel denies involvement, reframing the danger as internal. From there, The Rip fully shifts into paranoia, forcing Dane and JD to take increasingly drastic steps to expose the enemy within their own department.
The Rip Final Thoughts
The Rip succeeds because it prioritizes grit and character over flashy gimmicks. Carnahan delivers a lean, mean thriller that feels both nostalgic and modern.
The film’s greatest asset is the undeniable chemistry between Damon and Affleck. Their shared history brings a depth to Dane and JD that isn’t found in the script alone. Damon’s cool precision perfectly balances Affleck’s raw, impulsive energy. While the supporting cast is talented, they occasionally struggle to find space in the duo’s shadow.
Visually, the film captures Miami with a moody, oppressive atmosphere. The cinematography highlights the heat and the mounting paranoia within the unit. The tension in the stash house sequence is a masterclass in pacing and suspense.
The plot eventually hits some familiar beats in the final act. However, the performances are strong enough to carry the film through its predictable moments. It doesn’t reinvent the police procedural, but it executes the formula with impressive skill.
Ultimately, The Rip is a high-caliber thriller that rewards the audience’s time. It is a confident, propulsive start to 2026’s cinematic offerings.
The Rip
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Great - 8/108/10
