Four magicians each answer a mysterious summons to an obscure address with secrets inside. A year later, they are the Four Horsemen, big time stage illusionists who climax their sold-out Las Vegas show with a bank appare...
Four magicians each answer a mysterious summons to an obscure address with secrets inside. A year later, they are the Four Horsemen, big time stage illusionists who climax their sold-out Las Vegas show with a bank appare...
The film leans left by centering its conflict on a group of illusionists who expose and punish corrupt financial institutions and wealthy individuals, symbolically redistributing their ill-gotten gains to the public.
The movie features some visible diversity in its supporting cast, but it does not engage in explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. The narrative maintains a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities, with DEI themes not being central to the plot.
Now You See Me does not feature any explicit or implicit LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The story focuses entirely on its core plot of magic, heists, and an FBI pursuit, leaving no room for LGBTQ+ representation to be evaluated.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Now You See Me (2013) is an original film with no prior source material, historical figures, or previous installments from which characters' genders could be established and subsequently swapped.
This film features an original story and characters, with no prior source material, historical figures, or previous installments to establish character races. All characters were created for this specific film, thus precluding any race swaps.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources