Finestkind

6.9
20232h 6m

Two brothers from opposite sides of the tracks are reunited as adults. Desperate circumstances force them into a deal with an organized crime syndicate in Boston, and a young woman gets caught in the middle.

Production

Logo for 101 Studios
Logo for Bosque Ranch Productions
Logo for MTV Entertainment Studios

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Race to the Dock

Race to the Dock

Thumbnail for video: Mabel and Charlie Meet

Mabel and Charlie Meet

Thumbnail for video: How Performances Propel Plot

How Performances Propel Plot

Thumbnail for video: A Writer-Director Who Lived The Story

A Writer-Director Who Lived The Story

Thumbnail for video: What To Expect

What To Expect

Thumbnail for video: You Set Us Up

You Set Us Up

Cast

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I suppose the real thing to take away from this is just hard it can be for folks to make a living running a small fishing boat. Thereafter it's a bland family drama about two half brothers caught up in a drug smuggling caper as they desperately try to keep their business afloat by picking up drugs that have been deposited out at sea and bringing them ashore. When one such shipment goes pear-shaped then the family encounter brutality of their unscrupulous partners, all whilst the coastguard - in the USA and Canada - start to make their presence felt too. Matters are also made worse by the fact that their father (Tommy Lee Jones) is diagnosed with cancer and the pair - "Tom" (Ben Foster) and "Charlie" (Toby Wallace) - are determined not to let him down. To be fair, it doesn't quite follow the usual shipping lanes but the acting - especially from Tim Daly and Jenny Ortega is pretty rotten and the dialogue the others are left with is hardly the stuff of a Pulitzer prize, There is some decent maritime photography and we do get a sense of just how vulnerable they are on the eponymous trawler as the seas get livelier, but sadly that's the only thing that gets lively and I'd recommend that you just give this a miss, sorry.

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