Hate ads?! Want to be able to search and filter? Day and Night mode? Subscribe for just $5 a month!

The Rip: A Movie about Cops and Guns

Listen to Article

If you’re a 2A advocate who thrives on real-world tales of armed citizens and law enforcement standing tall against chaos, *The Rip*—streaming now and inspired by the harrowing 2016 Melbourne siege—delivers unfiltered grit that Hollywood often sanitizes. This Aussie thriller rips open the true story of armed radicals barricading a cafe, holding hostages at gunpoint, and the tactical chaos that ensued when police stormed in with AR-15s blazing. No CGI fluff here: it’s raw footage vibes, with leads Jai Courtney and Gyton Grantley channeling the high-stakes frenzy of outnumbered cops relying on marksmanship and split-second decisions. For gun enthusiasts, it’s a visceral reminder of why proficiency with firearms isn’t optional—it’s survival math in active shooter scenarios.

Dig deeper, and *The Rip* spotlights a universal truth the 2A community knows cold: when seconds count, the armed response matters most. The real 2016 event exposed Australia’s draconian gun laws in stark relief—handguns and semis banned for civilians, leaving cops to scramble with limited firepower against a perpetrator who’d illegally stockpiled weapons. Contrast that with U.S. precedents like the 2015 San Bernardino rampage, where concealed carriers could have tipped the scales faster. The film’s unflinching portrayal of ballistic reality—overpenetration risks, hostage rescue precision, and the fog of reloads under fire—fuels the pro-2A argument that widespread carry rights and training (think USCCA or NRA courses) deter and dismantle threats before they metastasize. It’s not just popcorn action; it’s a cinematic case study in why disarmed populaces breed vulnerability.

For the 2A faithful, *The Rip* isn’t entertainment—it’s a rallying cry wrapped in adrenaline. Watch it, then hit the range: analyze the tactics, debate the ROE, and share clips on X to counter the gun-grabbers’ narrative. In a world where true stories like this underscore armed resolve over wishful phone a cop passivity, this flick arms your mind with evidence that Second Amendment protections aren’t relics—they’re the ripcord for freedom. Stream it, dissect it, defend it.

Share this story