WOLFS

September 1, 2024

amy ryan, austin abrams, brad pitt, george clooney, jon watts, wolfs

Words by JANE CROWTHER


When a married New York DA (Amy Ryan) finds herself in a sticky situation – a dead hook-up in a penthouse suite – she calls the number of a man whose function is clean-up jobs. As the body of the boy she’s picked up in the lobby lies among shattered glass after bedroom hijinks, the voice on the line assures her he’ll take care of her problem. 

Enter George Clooney’s nameless lone wolf, an anonymous man with a body bag and a grumpy demeanour. ‘Nobody can do what I do,’ he insists. As he sets about his task, there’s a knock at the penthouse door: Brad Pitt’s fixer has also arrived. Dressed similarly and touting the same skill set, it seems Clooney’s not the only hitman in town – and now both of them are mixed up in a mess that reaches further than the luggage trolley of a high end hotel.

amy ryan, austin abrams, brad pitt, george clooney, jon watts, wolfs

The whys and wherefores of plot are immaterial in a film that understands the main attraction is seeing real-life buddies zing off each other as two grouchy middle-aged mystery men forced to work together when a standard job takes an unexpected turn. Suffice to say, drugs, cartels, shootouts, gangster weddings and a dopey business student (Euphoria’s Austin Abrams) are involved as the duo try to unravel a conspiracy overnight and in the process discover a grudging respect for each other.

Written and directed by Jon Watts as an amiable Ocean’s II, the appeal of Wolfs is the built-in chemistry between Pitt and Clooney as they banter and bitch through Chinatown foot and car chases, Croatian dance routines, and an interrogation in a hideous rent-by-the-hour hotel room. Their overlapping chatter plays like jazz, the result of years of off-screen friendship and the experience to inhabit these roles effortlessly.  Both actors have fun with their age, leaning into gags about bones cracking, needing Advil after some strenuous gunslinging and struggling to read pager messages without their glasses. Clooney’s car playlist is also a nice boomer dig; he listens to Sade’s Smooth Operator as he drives to a job.

amy ryan, austin abrams, brad pitt, george clooney, jon watts, wolfs
amy ryan, austin abrams, brad pitt, george clooney, jon watts, wolfs

It’s a tough gig for Abrams to steal any focus as the third wheel, a daffy teen who fancies a bit danger and ends up with the equivalent of a two killer dads (who might ice him but will also tell him to eat with his mouth closed), but he makes a lively impression – not least in a practical effect when he leaps over a moving car in tighty-whities and tube socks.

Clooney and Pitt clearly had a hoot making the film and the door is left open for more of the same if audiences also have a laugh. Abandon plot logic and Wolfs is daft fun with a rat pack vibe..


Words by JANE CROWTHER
Wolfs releases in cinemas 20 Sept before transferring to Apple TV+

TRENDING

Ceniza en la Boca, Y Tu Mama Tambien, Soldados de Salamina, Abel

DIEGO LUNA

Diego Luna’s return to directing – and his premiere of his fourth film, Ceniza en la Boca, at Cannes Film Festival – became something

Nicholas Galitzine, Jared Leto, Camila Mendes, Alison Brie, Idris Elba, Travis Knight

MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE

Barbie for boys? That’s one way of looking at this reboot of Mattel’s ’80s dominating toy line. In the original stories and cartoons

BUY

You may also like…

gary dauberman, jordan preston carter, lewis pullman, makenzie leigh, salem’s lot

SALEM’S LOT

You’re never too far away from a Stephen King adaptation. The prolific horror maestro is the most-adapted living author,…

viola davis, cannes film festival, air, cannes dispatch, hollywood authentic, greg williams

VIOLA DAVIS

CANNES DISPATCH 2 … Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS Viola Davis is no stranger to Cannes, but this is the first time she is attending as an EGOT winner. Davis is only one of 18 people to have received the accolade – earning a recent Grammy win for the best audiobook, narration and storytelling recording for her memoir,

Charles Dance, Christoph Waltz, Frankensein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac

FRANKENSTEIN

Guillermo del Toro has been yearning to give life to Mary Shelley’s classic story of reanimation, morals