Now You See Me: Now You Don't

Unlock the illusion.

6.3
20251h 52m

The original Four Horsemen reunite with a new generation of illusionists to take on powerful diamond heiress Veronika Vanderberg, who leads a criminal empire built on money laundering and trafficking. The new and old magicians must overcome their differences to work together on their most ambitious heist yet.

Production

Logo for Lionsgate
Logo for Media Capital Technologies

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Final Trailer

Final Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer #2

Official Trailer #2

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Isla, Rosamund and Ariana answering the BIG questions (new or OG Horsemen ofc)

Isla, Rosamund and Ariana answering the BIG questions (new or OG Horsemen ofc)

Thumbnail for video: Official Clip 'We Made The Fifth Horseman Reappear'

Official Clip 'We Made The Fifth Horseman Reappear'

Thumbnail for video: don't miss the #1 film in the WORLD.

don't miss the #1 film in the WORLD.

Thumbnail for video: pov: you've only got a 1 min to chat with Ariana Greenblatt

pov: you've only got a 1 min to chat with Ariana Greenblatt

Thumbnail for video: Critics agree - Now You See Me: Now You Don’t delivers the fun.

Critics agree - Now You See Me: Now You Don’t delivers the fun.

Thumbnail for video: There’s still a few more tricks up our sleeves.

There’s still a few more tricks up our sleeves.

Thumbnail for video: It’s good to be back.

It’s good to be back.

Cast

Photo of Jesse Eisenberg

Jesse Eisenberg

J. Daniel Atlas

Photo of Dominic Sessa

Dominic Sessa

Bosco Leroy

Photo of Ariana Greenblatt

Ariana Greenblatt

June McClure

Photo of Rosamund Pike

Rosamund Pike

Veronika Vanderberg

Photo of Woody Harrelson

Woody Harrelson

Merritt McKinney

Photo of Dave Franco

Dave Franco

Jack Wilder

Photo of Isla Fisher

Isla Fisher

Henley Reeves

Photo of Lizzy Caplan

Lizzy Caplan

Lula May

Photo of Morgan Freeman

Morgan Freeman

Thaddeus Bradley

Photo of Andrew Santino

Andrew Santino

Brett Finnegan

Photo of Henry Fisher

Henry Fisher

Brett's Buddy

Photo of Scott Alexander Young

Scott Alexander Young

Senior Board Member

Photo of Dominic Allburn

Dominic Allburn

Marc Schreiber

Photo of Bobby Holland Hanton

Bobby Holland Hanton

Interpol Agent

Photo of Mark Ruffalo

Mark Ruffalo

Dylan Rhodes

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Twelve years after they dazzled us with their magical skills, the “Four Horsemen” are mysteriously reunited and joined by an enthusiastic young trio who bring some new blood to their most difficult challenge yet. Someone wants them to bring the wealthy “Veronica Vanderberg” (Rosamund Pike) to her knees, but the only way to do that is to pinch her enormous diamond. Needless to say, this is kept in an ultra-secure vault and this one is also buried deep in the Arabian desert. Before they can even think on appropriating this gem, the cocky “Atlas” (Jesse Eisenberg) has to learn to get on with the even more sure of himself newbie “Bosco” (Dominic Sessa) whilst all seven, gradually, proceed to try to work together and decrypt the secrets hidden within a French château that has more than it’s fair share of secret passages and surprise residents. Meanwhile, this infamous stone has another would-be owner, who is attempting to blackmail the money laundering “Veronica” with some information that she might not want public. With no shortage of people trying to steal the thing, what happens next…? It has some moments, this film, when the pace really picks up and the visuals deliver some quickly paced feats of illusion that are quite entertainingly and usually acrobatically presented. In some ways, it also serves to debunk some of the myths of these theatrically deceptive arts, but sadly these scenes are too few and far between. There’s just way too much dialogue, and not enough vanishing. To be fair to Pike, she does look the part and her South African accent just about stays the course; Sessa, Justice Smith and Ariana Greenblatt deliver fine as they breathe new life - and a little map humour - into old props, but Harrelson hams up too annoyingly, Dave Franco just models his beaming smile and small T-shirts and Isla Fisher isn’t really on screen often enough to make very much difference to a story that is dragged out as if it were being paid, scene by scene, by a tourist board or some luxury product placement. It isn’t dull, and the production is way more highly polished than her jewel, but I think the sleight of hand filming techniques that maybe worked in 2013 are less effective now that we all know CGI can render the impossible, possible. Harmless fun.

M

Manuel São Bento

5/10

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://movieswetextedabout.com/now-you-see-me-now-you-dont-movie-review-ruben-fleischer-presents-a-more-polished-yet-empty-trick/

Rating: C+

"Now You See Me: Now You Don't undoubtedly asserts itself as the most solid entry in this trilogy, raising the technical bar and finding new life in the reinvigorated dynamic of its cast.

However, all the superficial shine and aesthetic improvements fail to hide a script that confuses complexity with complication, delivering characters that function merely as pieces on a formulaic board. It works as light entertainment, but it's insufficient to fully justify its return to the big screen.

It invites us to look closer, but unfortunately, the closer we look, the less we see the depth it promises, leaving only the fleeting glow of a well-rehearsed trick, yet empty of true magic."

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