Now You See Me 3: Release Date, Cast & Everything We Know About the Upcoming Movie

The Four Horsemen are coming back.
Now You See Me 3 is the long-awaited third installment of the franchise about skilled magicians and their adventures. The first film, released in 2013, captivated viewers with its unexpected twists.
Three years later, the sequel was released, and it was just as spectacular as the original. Now, almost ten years later, Lionsgate is preparing to release the third film. Here is everything we know about the new film.
Now You See Me 3 Release Date
The third installment of the franchise is expected to be released on November 14, 2025. Following its theatrical release, Now You See Me 3 will be available on Netflix.
Fans of the franchise have been waiting almost nine years for a sequel. Lionsgate announced the third film in the series back in May 2015.
Now You See Me 3 Main Cast
The core cast of the original Four Horsemen will return for the third film: Jesse Eisenberg will reprise his role as Daniel Atlas, Woody Harrelson will play Merritt McKinney, and Dave Franco will portray Jack Wilder.
Isla Fisher will reprise her role as escape artist Henley Reeves, a character absent from the second film and replaced by Lizzy Caplan's Lula.
Caplan is no longer listed as a cast member. It's still unclear whether Mark Ruffalo's character, a former FBI agent and the Horsemen's handler, will return.
What Will Now You See Me 3 Be About?
Now You See Me 2 ended with the four magicians outsmarting Daniel Radcliffe's tech mogul in a spectacular reveal in Central London.
At the very end, viewers learned that the skeptic, Thaddeus Bradley, is a magician himself and the leader of the Eye organization. He offered Dylan the chance to lead the society, opening a new chapter for the team of magicians.
It appears that the third installment will feature a time jump, and the writers will likely reveal the Horsemen's activities over the past few years.
Is Now You See Me 3 Worth Waiting For?
The story of rebel magicians acting as modern-day Robin Hoods in the fight against greedy bigwigs retains its spectacular appeal.
However, the success of the project largely depends on whether Ruben Fleischer can update the franchise's style and offer a fresh take on its main attraction: large-scale illusionist numbers. Fleischer is already familiar to viewers from his work with Eisenberg and Harrelson in Zombieland.
The main difficulty lies in changed audience perceptions. Previous films were products of the glossy 2000s, but modern viewers demand a more convincing and impressive approach to magic on screen.