‘The Rip’ launched on January 16, 2026, reunited Matt Damon and Ben Affleck as battle-tested Miami cops facing impossible choices. Lt. Dane Dumars (Damon) and Detective Sergeant J.D. Byrne (Affleck) command a tactical narcotics squad that raids a derelict stash house. They unearth millions in cartel cash, hidden away in plain sight. Routine turns ruthless as whispers spread. Partners turn wary, and the team fractures under greed’s weight in a city pulsing with cartel threats.
True story roots
That “inspired by true events” tag sparks curiosity, and the writer-director bases it on a friend’s harrowing raid. Chris Casiano, Miami-Dade tactical narcotics head and Bad Boys for Life consultant, lived the 2016 bust. His team tore through walls to reveal $24 million crammed into Home Depot buckets, the force’s record cash haul. Carnahan opened up to Tudum about the story’s grip, deepened by tragedy. Casiano lost his son Jake to leukemia in 2021. The film dedicates itself to Jake, fusing grief with high-wire tension.
Plot twist and tension
Cops count the loot amid closing dangers, echoing real tip-line frenzy from back then. Carnahan revives 1970s cop grit from Serpico, Prince of the City, and Heat, zeroing in on frayed bonds.
Miami’s dark history
Miami’s police lore carries heavy shadows that fuel ‘The Rip‘s’ menace. The 1980s Miami River Cops scandal exposed deep corruption when officers stole cocaine and cash from busts-pocketing millions before feds cracked down. Over 100 cops faced charges in America’s wildest drug war era. Carnahan weaves these echoes into his tale, showing how one big score tests even solid brotherhoods. Tip lines buzzed back then with sketchy leads, just like the film’s frantic calls about hidden loot.
Stellar cast
Teyana Taylor owns Detective Numa Baptiste-her Golden Globe glow fresh, while Steven Yeun edges out as watchful Detective Mike Ro. Damon and Affleck spark off each other naturally. Reviews hail the throwback thrills, landing near 84% on Rotten Tomatoes with punchy action, even if the pace dips at times. Catch ‘The Rip’ on Netflix for a taut dive into cop-world shadows.
