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Cash Queens (2026)
French Netflix heist dramedy series set in 1989, where five desperate women form a gang to rob banks after personal crises. Directed by Olivier Rosemberg. Rebecca Marder stars as Rosalie, with Zoé Marchal, Naidra Ayadi, Pascale Arbillot, Jérémie Laheurte, and Jonathan Cohen in key roles. Loosely based on real events.
French Netflix heist dramedy series set in 1989, where five desperate women form a gang to rob banks after personal crises. Directed by Olivier Rosemberg. Rebecca Marder stars as Rosalie, with Zoé Marchal, Naidra Ayadi, Pascale Arbillot, Jérémie Laheurte, and Jonathan Cohen in key roles. Loosely based on real events.
The series centers on women resorting to bank robbery amid poverty and systemic barriers, with the narrative highlighting solidarity against economic and corrupt structures as the key response to their plight.
The series presents visible ethnic diversity through its ensemble of female leads from varied backgrounds. It explores women's agency in a male-dominated crime world via an all-female heist crew facing economic desperation. Gender norms receive subtle attention through their disguises, without centering explicit critiques of traditional identities.
The series includes a queer female character, Chloe, whose arc involves leaving a stifling marriage for a new relationship, adding humor to the group dynamic. This depiction remains incidental, blending into the ensemble without affirming or critiquing queer identity prominently.
The series portrays traditional family structures as burdensome and failing, with single motherhood and unhappy marriages fueling the protagonists' desperation and turn to crime. Friendships among the women emerge as a supportive alternative, leaning toward progressive critiques of conventional roles.
No transgender characters or themes appear in the series. The story centers on five cisgender women who disguise themselves as men to execute a bank heist, with no exploration of trans identity or related issues.
Female characters form a bank-robbing gang and use firearms in heists against male bank staff and security. No depictions of victories through hand-to-hand combat, martial arts, or melee weapons occur.
Cash Queens portrays five female bank robbers inspired by the real-life all-female Gang des Amazones, with no changes to their documented genders. The in-story disguises as men do not constitute a gender swap of the characters.
Cash Queens features original characters in a fictional narrative inspired by real-life bank robberies, lacking direct portrayals of historical figures or adaptations with canonical racial baselines for its roles.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























