‘The Sticky’ Trailer: Margo Martindale Plots The Most Canadian Heist Ever In Prime Video’s New Series

Who doesn’t love maple syrup? It isn’t just good on pancakes and waffles, but use it in your oatmeal, or smother your breakfast meat with it. It’s damn near perfect. So a plot to steal millions of dollars worth of maple syrup? Sounds about right to me. And that’s what we’re going to see in the new Prime Video series, The Sticky, led by multi-time Emmy winner Margo Martindale.

The Sticky stars Martindale as Ruth Landry, a maple syrup farmer who is threatened with losing everything by the beaurucratic authorities. So in order to protect what she’s got and get some payback, Ruth hatches a plot to steal from Quebec’s maple syrup surplus.

Crazy story, right? For sure, but it’s also based on true events. Even the crimes in Canada are nicer than ours.

Martindale is joined in the cast by Chris Diamantopoulos, Guillaume Cyr, and Jamie Lee Curtis.

SYNOPSIS: The Sticky follows Ruth Landry (three-time Emmy Award winner Margo Martindale), a tough, middle-aged maple syrup farmer who turns to crime when the bureaucratic authorities threaten to take away everything she loves. She teams up with the hot-tempered Bostonian mobster (Chris Diamantopoulos), and a mild-mannered French-Canadian security guard (Guillaume Cyr) to carry out a multi-million-dollar heist on Quebec’s maple syrup surplus.

Prime Video debuts The Sticky on December 6th.

Travis Hopson has been reviewing movies before he even knew there was such a thing. Having grown up on a combination of bad '80s movies, pro wrestling, comic books, and hip-hop, Travis is uniquely positioned to geek out on just about everything under the sun. A vampire who walks during the day and refuses to sleep, Travis is the co-creator and lead writer for Punch Drunk Critics. He is also a contributor to Good Morning Washington, WBAL Morning News, and WETA Around Town. In the five minutes a day he's not working, Travis is also a voice actor, podcaster, and Twitch gamer. Travis is a voting member of the Critics Choice Association (CCA), Washington DC Area Film Critics Association (WAFCA), and Late Night programmer for the Lakefront Film Festival.