Words by JANE CROWTHER


It’s been over a decade since Robin Hood magician Atlas (Jesse Eisenberg), mind-reader Merritt (Woody Harrelson), card shark Jack (Dave Franco), and escapologist Henley (Isla Fisher) got together as ‘The Horsemen’ to use their illusions and tricks to teach bad guys a lesson. Summoned by mysterious society, The Eye, the Horsemen are brought together with a new pack of young magicians to chase a McGuffin diamond around Europe and try to break the icy composure of South Africa mine owner Veronica Vanderberg (Rosamund Pike). 

Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Fave Franco, Isla Fisher, Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith, Rosamund Pike, Morgan Freeman
Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

The new crew are played by Dominic Sessa, Ariana Greenblatt and Justice Smith but their MO is familiar. They like to sleight-of-hand steal fortunes from toxic tech bros and redistribute to their Gen Z audience via a series of fancy rabbit-out-the-hat stunts. On the trail of Vanderberg’s dirty arms money and fabulous gowns, the gang pitch up in Antwerp then find themselves in a fun house of illusion in Normandy, before private jetting to the Middle East for F1 shenanigans (one of them clearly has an expense account).

Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Fave Franco, Isla Fisher, Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith, Rosamund Pike, Morgan Freeman
Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate
Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Fave Franco, Isla Fisher, Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith, Rosamund Pike, Morgan Freeman
Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

There’s a third reel reveal that can be guessed a mile off, a cameo from Morgan Freeman and a number of daft ‘magic’ tricks that impress on presentation rather than plausibility. For those seeking a perfect ‘second screening’ experience (the ability of a film to bring an audience along even if they’re simultaneously scrolling on another device), Now You See Me 3 provides constant exposition and a likable tongue-in-cheek vibe from a cast who clearly enjoyed reuniting. Newbie Pike is delicious as a foe, with an Afrikaans accent as clear-cut as her gems and haircut. She imperiously sells the Bond-lite energy almost singlehandedly, as one might expect from the former Miranda Frost. 

Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Fave Franco, Isla Fisher, Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith, Rosamund Pike, Morgan Freeman
Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

In light of a recent real-life heist at the Louvre, it’s perhaps easier to suspend disbelief as the team lift the world’s largest diamond with some misdirection and costume changes. But the best magic tricks are those performed cinematically; fun fisticuffs in a forced perspective room, the incantation to Talladega Nights’ Ricky Bobby during a car chase, a pleasingly silly deception involving a lorry and a fog machine… Logic should be abandoned by all who enter, but for those looking for an amiable throwback romp, this threequel is diverting enough. But the success of the illusion relies on an audience not questioning the mechanics too robustly.

Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Fave Franco, Isla Fisher, Ariana Greenblatt, Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith, Rosamund Pike, Morgan Freeman
Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate

Words by JANE CROWTHER
Pictures courtesy of Lionsgate
Now You See Me, Now You Don’t is in cinemas now

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Student Alice is used to being picked up and brushed off by her parents whenever she stumbles. Though we never see her, we hear and know about her via her parents; over-protective Frank (Matthew Rhys) and his exasperated paramedic wife Maddie (Rosamund Pike). Early in the small hours, Alice calls her sleep-deprived mum in a panic – she has taken her dad’s car and driven to the titular road in a nearby forest where she’s accidentally knocked over a pedestrian. The parents jump into Maddie’s car to reach her, their SatNav informing them of the distance to reach their daughter while an increasingly upset Alice keeps them abreast over the speakerphone of the terrible, fatal mess she’s got herself into. 

Babak Anvari, Hallow Road, Matthew Rhys, Megan McDonnell, Rosamund Pike
Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Essentially a real-time bottle episode in the vein of Locke, Hallow Road then unfurls, one mile and minute at a time, in the car as the couple struggle to help their child remotely, question their parenting and reveal the fractured family dynamic that preceded Alice storming out of the house earlier. And as the country roads become more labyrinthine and dark, a folk horror aspect begins to hover over proceedings as both parents’ psychological secrets come to the fore. 

Hallow Road starts with a warning – a battery depleted smoke alarm chirruping – and grows in tension and disquiet as Rhys and Pike master myriad emotions while the green dashboard light casts a queasy hue over their distraught faces. To give more detail would be to spoil, but if you’re familiar with director Babak Anvari’s previous work in Under The Shadow, the fact that the crisis at the start of this thriller morphs to something more primal and primordial at its close should come as no surprise. Like the fraught relationship between parents and daughter (voiced by Megan McDonnell), there is something else going on in the trees – what exactly is open to interpretation by each viewer. And, based on a post-credit sting, those interpretations will not necessarily align. 

Playing like a lost episode of Inside No 9, this disorientating, brisk thriller is an easy way to spend 80 minutes this weekend while also opening conversations of guilt, grief, helicopter parenting and the inherent creepiness of deep, dark woods.

Babak Anvari, Hallow Road, Matthew Rhys, Megan McDonnell, Rosamund Pike
Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Words by JANE CROWTHER
Images © 2025 Universal Pictures
Hallow Road is in cinemas now