
"Tatum beamed. "I like 'reasonable,' because that is right. If I ever really needed to get a real perspective on something, I would absolutely come to you," he said, turning to his co-star. "I would 100 percent want to have your perspective, because I know it would be a reasonable one. On both sides! You wouldn't just try to take my side.""
"While Derek Cianfrance's fact-based feature marks the first time Dunst and Tatum have starred together, the pair are longtime admirers of each other's work. That admiration is obvious, even through the screen of a Zoom interview, as the pair comfortably traded stories (and compliments) about the other and how that respect and appreciation translated to 2025's most charming onscreen pairing."
"Dunst and Tatum don't even really interact until the film is almost at its midway mark. Instead, we watch Tatum's Jeffrey Manchester - based on a very real dude, who became infamous in the late '90s for breaking into various fast food joints through the roof, then robbing them in quite respectful fashion - admire Dunst's Leigh Wainscott from afar, kind"
Kirsten Dunst and Channing Tatum express clear mutual admiration and ease with one another, which informs their on-screen dynamic. Channing Tatum praises Dunst's reasonableness and perspective, while Dunst responds with modest amusement. An award identifying Dunst as a notably reasonable movie star was presented during the meeting. Derek Cianfrance's fact-based Roofman marks the actors' first collaboration, and the film delays their direct interaction until midway. The story follows Jeffrey Manchester, a late-1990s figure who entered fast-food restaurants through roofs to rob them, who admires Leigh Wainscott from afar.
Read at IndieWire
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]