All the Old Knives

Secrets kill.

6.0
20221h 41m

Production

Logo for Barry Linen Motion Pictures

When the CIA discovers one of its agents leaked information that cost more than 100 people their lives, veteran operative Henry Pelham is assigned to root out the mole with his former lover and colleague Celia Harrison.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Terrorist Attack Clip

Terrorist Attack Clip

Cast

Photo of Chris Pine

Chris Pine

Henry Pelham

Photo of Thandiwe Newton

Thandiwe Newton

Celia Harrison

Photo of Jonathan Pryce

Jonathan Pryce

Bill Compton

Photo of Laurence Fishburne

Laurence Fishburne

Vick Wallinger

Photo of Corey Johnson

Corey Johnson

Karl Stein

Photo of Jonjo O'Neill

Jonjo O'Neill

Ernst Pul

Photo of Ahd Kamel

Ahd Kamel

Leila Maloof

Photo of David Dawson

David Dawson

Owen Lassiter

Photo of Nasser Memarzia

Nasser Memarzia

Mohammed Dudayev

Photo of Orli Shuka

Orli Shuka

Ilyas Shishani

Photo of Gala Gordon

Gala Gordon

Waitress

Photo of David Bedella

David Bedella

Drew Favreau

Photo of Derek Siow

Derek Siow

Gene Wilcox

Photo of Anna Jones

Anna Jones

Anna Jones

Photo of Abdul Alshareef

Abdul Alshareef

Suleiman Abdulwahed

Photo of Cali Gayle

Cali Gayle

Ginny Favreau

Photo of Oscar Coleman

Oscar Coleman

Evan Favreau

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Reviews

M

Manuel São Bento

5/10

MORE REVIEWS @ https://www.msbreviews.com/

"All the Old Knives holds an extraordinary cast and an interesting premise, but Janus Metz's uninspired execution turns a movie with immense potential into yet another generic work with little replay value.

Chris Pine and Thandiwe Newton shine as the protagonists, and their astonishing chemistry transforms a simple dinner into the most captivating storyline of the entire narrative. However, the constant shifts between different timelines and distinct perspectives withdraw energy, pacing, and focus from Olen Steinhauer's decent screenplay.

Furthermore, Laurence Fishburne and Jonathan Pryce are criminally underused. It's far from being a non-recommended flick, but it leaves a somewhat bitter feeling by the end."

Rating: C

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

The scene is set in a fine restaurant where "Pelham" (Chris Pine) and ex-girlfriend "Celia" (Thandiwe Newton) and sharing some wine and considering who betrayed them many years earlier when their CIA operation around the hijacking of an airliner in Vienna went wrong. Ostensibly, "Pelham" is leading an investigation into the identity of the mole - it could be either of them, for all we know, or it could be their boss "Compton" (Sir Jonathan Pryce)... Sadly, though, John Le Carré this isn't. The narrative uses Pine's character as the conduit to interrogate all the potential suspects, and sadly that drags us into the solidly melodramatic aspects of his relationship with "Celia". On the plus side, that allows him to do what he has been trying to do ever since "Star Trek" (2009) - get his ass out on screen, but otherwise it is a terribly slowly paced affair. The espionage elements are largely subsumed into the relationship drama and frankly, neither Pine nor Newton have much to do in this dialogue heavy drudge of a film. It looks good, the production has a style to it; but quite simply not enough happens to keep it stimulating, the soporific lighting starts to take effects and after about 45 minutes I was really quite bored with it all. The ending is quite quirky, but it was all too little too late for me.

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