“This city, this whole country, is a strip club.
You’ve got people tossing the money, and people doing the dance.”
– Ramona
At the start of 2007, Destiny (Constance Wu) is a young woman struggling to make ends meet, to provide for herself and her grandma. But it’s not easy: the managers, DJs, and bartenders expect a cut– one way or another – leaving Destiny with a meager payday after a long night of stripping.
Her life is forever changed when she meets Ramona (Jennifer Lopez), the club’s top money earner, who’s always in control, has the clientele figured out, and really knows her way around a pole. The two women bond immediately, and Ramona gives Destiny a crash course in the various poses and pole moves like the carousel, fireman, front hook, ankle-hook, and stag. Another dancer, the irrepressible Diamond (Cardi B) provides a bawdy and revelatory class in the art of the lap dance.
But Destiny’s most important lesson is that when you’re part of a broken system, you must hustle or be hustled.
To that end, Ramona outlines for her the different tiers of the Wall Street clientele who frequent the club. The two women find themselves succeeding beyond their wildest dreams, making more money than they can spend – until the September 2008 economic collapse. Wall Street stole from everyone and never suffered any consequences. Now, Ramona, Destiny, and two dancers who’ve joined their little family – the unstoppable Mercedes (Keke Palmer) and the young and innocent Annabelle (Lili Reinhart) – look to turn the tables.
They cook up an inventive scheme to get their lives back on the fast-track to success. The game is still rigged against them, so to even the playing field Ramona devises a special drug cocktail that leaves their customers helpless against the ladies’ charms. Nobody’s really
Inspired by true events, HUSTLERS is a comedy-drama that follows a crew of savvy strip club employees who band together to turn the tables on their Wall Street clients.
getting hurt, they reason; it’s just like robbing a bank, except the men are handing them the keys. The foursome create a bond tighter than any family—until things get out of control.
From STXfilms, HUSTLERS stars Constance Wu, Jennifer Lopez, Julia Stiles, Keke Palmer, Lili Reinhart, with Mercedes Ruehl and Cardi B. The film also stars Lizzo, Mette Towley, Madeline Brewer, and Trace Lysette. The film is written and directed by Lorene Scafaria, inspired by the article published by New York magazine entitled “The Hustlers at Scores,” written by Jessica Pressler. The producers are Jessica Elbaum, Elaine Goldsmith- Thomas, Jennifer Lopez, Benny Medina, Will Ferrell, and Adam McKay.
HUSTLERS brings together a compelling mix of humor, spectacle, social commentary, and a group of disparate women who team up and look for ways to even the odds that are stacked against them. In addition, says Constance Wu, it’s about a relatable issue that affects so many. “I had been looking to play a character who was deeply lonely, because of how our culture causes such loneliness,” she explains. “We need stories about that. Destiny is so beautiful to me because of her solitude, and the ways she tried to pretend her way out of it seemed counter intuitive, but also so very human.”
Jennifer Lopez, who portrays Ramona and serves as a producer on the film, says she was drawn to the fact that HUSTLERS is about “greed, power, and the American Dream and what a certain group of women, who work in a field where they are discounted, will do to achieve it. It’s an amorality story about the slippery slope of the hustle. These women did not invent the game; they just tried to level the playing field. It’s about right, wrong, and how far you’ll go to hustle for your dreams.”
“We’re presenting a world we may have seen in many movies and TV shows, but from a different perspective – that of the dancers,” says writer-director Lorene Scafaria. “It’s an epic mix of crime drama, stripper movie, and an exploration of the economic upheaval that upended the lives of so many, including our characters’. Jessica Pressler’s article was a compelling story of fascinating characters who are constantly facing judgment and living with a stigma about their profession, and about deep friendships that can sometimes get you into trouble.”
Producer Jessica Elbaum, a principal at Gloria Sanchez Productions, which optioned Pressler’s New York magazine story, observes, “I found these women’s journeys to be fascinating. It’s a slice of life and a cautionary tale about what happens when your ambition is bigger than the reality of your situation.”
The producers and cast are unanimous in their praise of Scafaria. “Lorene was the right filmmaker for HUSTLERS for so many reasons!” Constance Wu enthuses. “Because she treated each character as a human, not an archetype/caricature. Because she is very plugged
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into the culture. Because it wasn’t about the male gaze; it wasn’t about any gaze at all. Lorene goes deeper than the surface level of a gaze. She gets into the heart, the guts.”
Adds Elbaum: “Lorene had an incredible take on how to tell this story. She truly respects the characters and what they were trying to do. Lorene makes the women authentic by neither victimizing nor celebrating them, and by understanding how what was happening in the world at the time helped make them who they are.”
Keke Palmer calls Scafaria “one of the most intuitive and kind directors I have ever worked with. She’s humble yet always confident and assured in her vision for the film. Lorene made sure we all felt protected, and I think that’s important because it’s the opposite of what our characters are experiencing.”