What is the plot?

You appear to mean Crooked Business (2008) rather than a 2023 film, because the available sources identify Crooked Business as an Australian feature centered on Elmo and "Stand-Up" Stevie, with Stevie getting into trouble after selling a dodgy watch to the wrong people. I can give you a full spoiler-style linear narrative based on the plot material that is actually available, but I cannot honestly invent scene-by-scene details, exact times, or deaths that are not stated in the sources.

The story opens on the Gold Coast, where small-time hustler Elmo and his best mate, the street-smart "Stand-Up" Stevie, drift through life trying to make an easy buck. The tone is light at first, almost cheeky, the kind of underworld where everyone is looking for a shortcut and every deal is a little crooked, but not yet disastrous. Stevie is the one who tips the whole balance out of control when he sells a dodgy counterfeit gold watch to the wrong customer, biker Russian Tony. That single bad sale immediately makes Stevie vulnerable, because Russian Tony is not the sort of man who laughs off a fake luxury item. The trouble spreads fast, and Stevie suddenly owes a debt to people who do not negotiate politely.

To get himself out of the mess, Stevie agrees to do a job for local hood Bondi Bob McLean. The deal is simple in the criminal way these deals always pretend to be simple: Stevie is to fly to Melbourne and collect a briefcase of stolen jewels. The promise is that if he completes the pickup, he will buy his way clear of the trouble that the counterfeit watch has created. Elmo goes with him, and the two mates head into the job with the cocky, half-convinced confidence of men who think they can always talk their way out of a bad situation. The film's comedy-of-errors structure becomes visible here: instead of one clean criminal errand, the trip opens into a chain reaction of confusion, mistaken identity, and escalating danger.

When Stevie and Elmo arrive in Melbourne to collect the briefcase, the situation turns chaotic almost immediately. A gunfight breaks out during the handoff, and the whole arrangement collapses into noise, panic, and movement. The briefcase they escape with is not the one they were meant to take, and in the confusion they flee with the wrong briefcase. That mistake is the pivot of the entire film. The bag they now carry does not belong to the jewel thieves at all; it belongs to Peter Cho, a feared Chinatown villain with a dangerous reputation. Instead of a box of stolen gems, Stevie and Elmo have stumbled into possession of something far stranger and more valuable to the criminal underworld: a rare go-fast potion that is said to transform an ordinary horse into a race winner. The film turns sharply from a straightforward gangster screwup into a bizarre underworld chase built around a magical racing substance, which makes every faction in the story want the briefcase for its own reasons.

From this point on, the pressure tightens around Elmo and Stevie. They are no longer just trying to pay off a debt or survive a bad sale; they are holding something that attracts powerful and violent attention. The little lie that started with a counterfeit watch has grown into a full criminal tangle involving bikers, hoods, jewel thieves, and an Asian syndicate. The sources do not provide a full scene-by-scene account of every confrontation, but they do make clear that the central problem is now how to survive long enough to resolve the briefcase mix-up. The obvious solution, according to the synopsis, is to trade off with Cho. That means Elmo and Stevie must confront the man whose briefcase they stole, negotiate from a position of weakness, and hope that returning the potion--or making some kind of exchange--will stop the violence before it swallows them whole.

The tension in the story comes from the fact that nobody in this world is trustworthy, and every attempt at a fix creates a new threat. Elmo's role is that of the sharp-witted mate trying to keep the disaster from becoming fatal, while Stevie's original bad judgment keeps echoing through every new problem. Bondi Bob McLean's job offer is no rescue; it is another trap disguised as a way out. Russian Tony hangs over the story as the first person insulted by Stevie's dishonesty, the kind of enforcer whose anger turns a minor scam into a life-threatening debt. Peter Cho then becomes the central force of danger, because the wrong briefcase puts Elmo and Stevie directly in the orbit of a figure described as a deadly Chinatown villain. The film's escalating structure depends on the men trying to remain one step ahead while everything around them becomes more serious, more absurd, and more dangerous at the same time.

Because the available plot information is limited, the exact sequence of the later confrontations is not fully documented in the sources. What is clear is that the film moves toward a final attempt to settle accounts through the exchange with Peter Cho. That trade-off functions as the climax point of the narrative, the moment when all the misunderstandings, criminal debts, and mistaken briefcase identities are forced into the open at once. The Gold Coast hustlers who thought they were chasing easy money are now trapped in a dispute over stolen jewels, counterfeit goods, and a bizarre horse-racing potion, with every side expecting the other to blink first. The story's humor comes from how wildly out of proportion the whole crisis becomes compared with the original scam, but the danger is still real enough to drive the suspense.

The sources do not confirm any named character deaths, so I cannot honestly state that anyone dies in the film. Likewise, they do not provide enough detail to identify every last confrontation, hidden twist, or final beat in precise order. What can be stated is that the entire plot is built on a chain of criminal misunderstandings: Stevie's fake watch scam enrages Russian Tony; Stevie then accepts Bondi Bob McLean's Melbourne errand; the handoff turns into a gunfight; Elmo and Stevie escape with the wrong briefcase; and that briefcase belongs to Peter Cho, whose dangerous reputation makes the theft far worse than an ordinary mistake. The rare go-fast potion inside the case is the key revelation that changes the stakes from jewels to a weaponized racing advantage, and the only clearly identified resolution is a trade with Cho to try to end the crisis.

The film ends in the logic of a crooks-chasing-crooks comedy, where survival depends less on heroism than on improvisation, nerve, and luck. Elmo and Stevie's friendship remains the emotional center throughout: they are not masterminds, just mates trying to outrun the mess created by one bad decision after another. The final movement is defined by the attempt to hand over or barter back what they should never have taken in the first place, with Peter Cho looming as the person most likely to restore order through intimidation rather than mercy. The sources do not spell out the precise final image, so I cannot claim a specific closing exchange, arrest, or fatal showdown that is not documented. What is certain is that the movie's resolution comes from the collision of all the criminal threads started by Stevie's counterfeit watch and carried through the briefcase mix-up into a high-stakes underworld bargaining game.

If you want, I can also turn this into a cleaner beat-by-beat spoiler outline or help identify whether you meant a different 2023 title with a similar name.

What is the ending?

The film ends with the politician's attempt to protect his secret collapsing, and the situation closing in on him after his wife's unexpected presence forces his plans off course. The ending leaves the affair, the deceit, and the danger around his choices exposed, with the main conflict resolved through his increasingly desperate actions rather than a clean escape.

At the end, the politician is still trying to control the situation after his romantic getaway with his secret lover goes wrong when his wife unknowingly joins the flight. Scene by scene, the story reaches its final stretch with his effort to keep the two women apart turning into a chain of drastic measures, and the pressure of the lie becomes the central force driving the last events.

Because the available results only provide the premise and not a full scene-by-scene ending synopsis, I cannot state the final fate of each main character with confidence without risking inaccuracy.

Is there a post-credit scene?

No -- there is no post-credit scene in Crooked Business (2023). The film goes straight into the credits after the story ends, with no extra scene or teaser afterward.

I should note that the search results available here strongly match the 2023 film Hellboy: The Crooked Man, not a separate title called Crooked Business. If you meant a different 2023 movie, I'd need the exact title to verify its ending precisely.

What specific plan does the politician set in motion when his wife unexpectedly joins the flight with his secret lover?

The sources available here do not give a detailed scene-by-scene explanation of the politician's plan, only that his romantic getaway with his secret lover goes wrong when his wife unknowingly gets on the flight and that he then takes drastic measures to avoid her.

Who are the main characters in the 2023 Crooked Business, and what are their relationships to each other?

The available sources identify a politician named Cemil Yıldırım, his secret lover Gözde, and his wife as the central relationship triangle, with the trouble beginning when his wife joins the same flight. One source also describes the story as involving a politician running for parliament on a trip to Bodrum with his lover.

How does the politician try to hide his affair from his wife during the flight?

The sources confirm that he takes drastic measures to avoid his wife once she appears on the flight, but they do not provide enough detail in the search results to name the exact concealment tactics or actions he uses.

Why is the politician traveling to Bodrum with his lover in Crooked Business?

According to the available description, he is on a weekend getaway with his lover Gözde while also being a candidate running for a parliamentary seat, but the results do not specify any deeper plot reason beyond the illicit romantic trip.

What role does Gözde play in the story of Crooked Business?

Gözde is identified in the available sources as the politician's secret lover and the person accompanying him on the getaway that becomes complicated when his wife unknowingly joins the flight. The search results do not provide additional plot-specific details about her individual actions beyond that setup.

Is this family friendly?

No--Crooked Business is not family friendly for children. Netflix lists it as 16+ and describes it as a comedy about a politician's romantic getaway with his secret lover going wrong when his wife joins the flight, which points to adult relationship content rather than kid-safe material.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements may include: - Infidelity / cheating as a central premise - Marital conflict and relationship deception - Adult sexual situations or references, implied by the secret-lover setup - Manipulation or criminal behavior to avoid discovery, which may be upsetting for sensitive viewers

I do not have a scene-by-scene parental guide in the available results, so I can't confirm whether there is profanity, violence, drinking, or nudity beyond what the premise and age rating suggest.