After spending 12 years in prison for keeping his mouth shut, notorious safe-cracker Dom Hemingway is back on the streets of London looking to collect what he's owed.
Dom Hemingway is often viciously funny, and every time you think the movie has run out of steam, Shepard spins things in a new direction, keeping the energy from flagging (including one of the most startling car crashes I've ever seen in a film).
– Rene Rodriguez,
Miami Herald,
17 Apr 2014
fresh:
The title character of this florid crime comedy could be an escapee from a Tarantino script, all flashy character traits and verbal overkill.
– Colin Covert,
Minneapolis Star Tribune,
17 Apr 2014
fresh:
"Dom Hemingway" has two terrific things going for it: snappy dialogue (I was quite fond of the accusation "You disrespected my cat") and Law, who's both funny and scary in equal measures.
– Moira MacDonald,
Seattle Times,
17 Apr 2014
fresh:
You don't so much care where Dom is going as how he's getting there, and he's getting there loud.
– Tom Long,
Detroit News,
18 Apr 2014
fresh:
Dom is effusive with self-destructive charisma, the kind of loose cannon you'd follow into an all-night bender in spite of your better judgment.