Movie Review: âNow You See Me: Now You Donâtâ brings back the magic with new faces and tricks
- - Movie Review: âNow You See Me: Now You Donâtâ brings back the magic with new faces and tricks
MARK KENNEDY November 12, 2025 at 1:38 AM
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1 / 6Film Review - Now You See Me: Now You Don'tThis image released by Lionsgate shows, from left, Justice Smith, Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa, Jesse Eisenberg, Isla Fisher and Dave Franco in a scene from "Now You See Me: Now You Don't." (Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate via AP)
Ten years or so between installments of a successful Hollywood franchise is a lifetime. When it comes to the third âNow You See Meâ movie â poof! â time doesn't matter. These magicians still got it.
âNow You See Me: Now You Donâtâ does what sequels apparently must do these days â load up the characters, return to favorite bits and go global â but nails the trick, a crowd-pleasing return that already has a fourth in the works.
âIt is very good to be back,â says Jesse Eisenberg as the egotistical, perfectionist J. Daniel Atlas, the brains behind the magician-robber outfit. It's hard to argue with that sentiment on the strength of this outing, directed with assurance by Ruben Fleischer.
âNow You See Me: Now You Donâtâ acts as a sort of pivot, bringing back the veterans â all of them, in various forms â as well as introducing three Gen Z eat-the-rich magicians played by Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith and Ariana Greenblatt. They're clearly the future. It's in good (sleight of) hands.
The movie starts off with a clever rip-off of nasty crypto bros in Brooklyn and expands to scenes in Belgium, the United Arab Emirates, France and South Africa. It's got Nazis, âHarry Potterâ vibes and some Louvre museum heist energy. We didn't need the F1 chase through Abu Dhabi, but no one's complaining.
The original Four Horsemen â Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco and Isla Fisher â are supplemented by Lizzy Caplan, who had replaced Fisher in the second installment. Morgan Freeman returns as the gravel-voiced mentor.
The prize at the movie's heart is a diamond â but no mere bauble. It's the Heart Diamond, the largest ever discovered, with a price tag of half a billion dollars. It's the size of a smoked turkey leg.
The diamond is owned by a particularly vile South African diamond mine scion who uses her ultra-wealth to launder money for warlords and arms dealers. She is played deliciously by Rosamund Pike with a snide disdain and a nifty Afrikaner accent.
The secretive magic society known as The Eye unites the old Horsemen and the new trio (the Three Ponies?) to steal the diamond, stored in one of those multilevel, biometric âMission: Impossibleâ-style bunkers.
Capturing it won't enhance their bank statements. Remember, they're all really anti-capitalist, share-the-wealth magicians â most likely democratic socialists, in vogue right now. âThis is a chance to drive a stake through the devil herself,â Eisenberg's character says.
Hollywood is funny that way, creating a multimillion-dollar franchise on the back of heroic left-wing activist characters and convincing the UAE to set it on their streets.
At first, itâs hard, with eight heroes rushing around, to figure out the primary dynamics. The older Horsemen are strangely muted here â except for Caplan, a hoot â and the young need some seasoning. Intergenerational bickering keeps the movie alive.
There's a quick stop at a French chateau where some real magic takes place, literally. The last two âNow You See Meâ installments got very green-screen and CGI when it came to effects, but the third very refreshingly steps back into old-fashioned trickery. In a single take, we see each of the heroes try to top the others with a card trick, misdirection or illusion.
There's also a hall of mirrors, an upside-down room, an infinity staircase, a perspective-warping room and a nifty escape from a chamber filling with sand. Kudos to the filmmakers for embracing physical tricks over digital trickery. Also, cute use of Lady Gagaâs âAbracadabra.â
All this leads to a huge showdown between the diamond princess and our motley magicians. You won't guess who's been pulling the strings all this time. Seriously, you won't. And a new generation of magician-thieves are minted. That was a hard trick to pull off.
âNow You See Me: Now You Donât,â a Lionsgate release in theaters Friday, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for some strong language, violence and suggestive references. Running time: 112 minutes. Three stars out of four.
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ