Rough Diamonds movie On Netflix, Where A Man Returns To His Estranged Family To Defend Its Reputation
Netflix, new Belgian thriller Rough Diamonds is more than just about smuggling and dirty dealing. It also involves a man who comes back to his ultra-Orthodox Jewish family after leaving the sect fifteen years ago in order to find out what made his brother commit suicide.
Opening Shot: A young Jewish man lies in his bed, eyes wide open.
The Gist: Yanki Wolfson (Vincent Van Sande) ritually washes his hands and gets out of bed; he gets dressed in his traditional garb, but leaves his diamond-encrusted watch at home. He walks to the diamond exchange in downtown Antwerp, to the offices of Wolfson Diamonds, where he works. That’s when he tricks the security guard, grabs his gun, runs into an office, and kills himself.
Noah Wolfson (Kevin Janssens), who left left his family’s Orthodox sect 15 years ago, is at the Brussels airport with his son, Tommy McCabe (Casper Knopf) — he has his late mother’s last name. He didn’t find out about his brother Yanki’s death via his estranged family, though.
What he also found out is that Yanki was a gambling addict who owed a bookie hundreds of thousands of euros. He surprises his family at Yanki’s funeral; his sister Adina (Ini Massez) is happy to see him after 15 years, but his brother Eli (Robbie Cleiren) isn’t quite as happy. He’s also there to see Yani’s widow Gila (Marie Vinck), with whom he had a relationship before he suddenly left all those years ago.
He finds out the bookie’s name from his friend Sammy Silber (Joost Vandecasteele), who is the one who told him about Yanki’s death. He threatens the bookie, who seems unfazed; he tells Noah that Yanki went to Eli for help and Eli sent him away. When he angrily goes back to his family with that info, Eli denies it happened like that, but even if it did, it was more important to protect the family name. An exasperated Noah says this is one of the reasons why he left.
Adina tells Noah that Yanki was doing shady diamond deals, one where he never got payment. Now they owe a supplier over a million euros, a debt they could have absorbed a decade ago, but the diamond trade isn’t what it was. If an arbitrator’s ruling doesn’t go their way, it’ll ruin the business.
Meanwhile, prosecutor Jo Smets (Els Dottermans) is investigating an Albanian drug smuggling operation, which is being executed through secret compartments in shipping containers, given that they’ve frozen other ways for the Albanians to sell their goods. The captures are small and sporadic, until a find of rough diamonds worth over a million euros is discovered.