Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Mark Wingett | ... | Marcus King | |
![]() |
Claire King | ... | Yvonne King |
Rachel Bright | ... | Jessica Slade | |
Nicholas Brendon | ... | Brad Walsh | |
Vas Blackwood | ... | Mr. Mustaffa | |
Jonno Davies | ... | Andrew King | |
![]() |
Zed Josef | ... | James King |
![]() |
Greg Tanner | ... | Jimmy Tate |
Lisa Ronaghan | ... | Kylie White | |
Francesca Louise White | ... | Gemma Carter | |
Hainsley Lloyd Bennett | ... | Anthony Tully | |
![]() |
Bryn Hodgen | ... | George |
Richard Summers-Calvert | ... | Dexter | |
Jack Loy | ... | Mo | |
Makenna Guyler | ... | Zoe |
King of Crime is about Marcus King, an old school gangster, a crime lord, who has left behind old school crime. He has manoeuvred his business into the leafy lanes of the suburbs and now, in place of pimps and dealers, his team consists of the best graduate geeks that money can bribe. No brothels, no casinos and no drugs - he's dragged serious, organised crime well and truly into the twenty-first century. From credit card cloning and skimming to Internet spamming and scamming, he is the king of Cyber Land. Written by Linda Dunscombe
How does the money get found for making these films.
At the beginning, not bad, establishing a ruthless gangster with family issues getting moved in on by terrorists who want the money stream. A bit Long Good Friday meets Dynasty and more or less credible plot if you ignore New Girl Jess is totally unfazed by seeing people murdered in front of her on her first day. Jess may as well be wearing a t-shirt that says I have An Agenda You Will Find Out About Later in A Twist. Acting is good enough, for this kind of film. Then other plot elements get thrown in like a team of vaping teenagers designed it based on the last Netflix they saw. I can see it is low budget, made with a lot of people mucking in and there is nothing wrong with that. Ropey effects and saving money by filming in the lobbies of office buildings or whatever is fine. But the story just goes off the rails. Law enforcement of any kind is completely absent in this reality, despite suicide vests and heaps of bodies. A Hacker is not what he seems, but is in fact still a Hacker, so why would the people he works for need him to pretend to be something else to do what he does. Why doesn't his real employer just let him do the thing they cleverly get the gangster to force him to do? There is no reason for him to intersect with gangster family. It just made no sense at all. Why does the gangster have to turn out to be not who we think he is sexuality wise, how does that add to the story? His relationship with Jess, not the one she pretends she has but the actual one (confised, you should be...) doesn't need to connect in the way it does for her motivation to be what it is. It's just a weird twist serving nothing but its own twistiness. It's 6th formers trying to be too clever.
I won't spoil the end, I will leave that to the screenwriter, but Nicholas Brendon shows up at the 11th hour for the 5 minutes he is in it, totally justifying his place as 4th on the billing.