Menu
Devil's Knot Poster

Devil's Knot

They say the crimes were satanic. The truth may be scarier.
2013 | 114m | English

(25451 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

The savage murders of three young children sparks a controversial trial of three teenagers accused of killing the kids as part of a satanic ritual.
Release Date: May 09, 2013
Director: Atom Egoyan
Writer: Scott Derrickson, Paul Harris Boardman, Mara Leveritt
Genres: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Keywords child murder, satanism, knife, arkansas, biography, based on true story, woods, diner, crime scene, police interrogation, 1990s, wonder, legal thriller, triple murder, west memphis three
Production Companies Worldview Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $15,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 04, 2026
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers

Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Colin Firth Ron Lax
Reese Witherspoon Pam Hobbs
Dane DeHaan Chris Morgan
Mireille Enos Vicki Hutcherson
Bruce Greenwood Judge David Burnett
Elias Koteas Jerry Driver
Stephen Moyer John Fogelman
Alessandro Nivola Terry Hobbs
Amy Ryan Margaret Lax
Robert Baker Detective Bryn Ridge
Kevin Durand John Mark Byers
Michael Gladis Dan Stidham
James Hamrick Damien Echols
Martin Henderson Brent Davis
Kristopher Higgins Jessie Misskelley
Brian Howe Detective McDonough
Matt Letscher Paul Ford
Seth Meriwether Jason Baldwin
Rex Linn Chief Inspector Gitchell
Kristoffer Polaha Val Price
Collette Wolfe Glori Shettles
Ted Huckabee Steve Jones
Kerry Cahill Jo Lynn
Jet Jurgensmeyer Stevie Branch
Paul Boardman Jr. Michael Moore
Brandon Spink Chris Byers
Julie Ivey Melissa Byers
Jack Coghlan Aaron Hutcheson
Lori Beth Sikes Annie
Gary Grubbs Dale Griffis
Stan Houston Detective Donald Bray
Matthew Stanton Detective Durham
Clay Stapleford Detective Mike Allen
Stephanie Stewart Domini Teer (as Stephanie Steward)
Bill Murphey Marty King
Brooke Jaye Taylor Officer Regina Meeks
Isabella Zentkovich Amanda Hobbs
Quincy Bonds Court Officer (as Quincey Bonds)
Morgan Pelligrino Reporter at Courthouse
Arvell Poe Bloody Muddy Man
Brandon Carroll Bobby DeAngelo
Haley Craft Teenage Employee
Amber Chaney Older Employee
Scott Poythress Criminalist
Judd Lormand Desk Officer
Corey James Wright HBO Cameraman (as Corey Wright)
Kate Kneeland Ron's Secretary
Abigail Monet Girl on Stand
Brandon Wood Trailer Park Teen
Joey Nappo Trailer Park Teen
David Ramsey Baptist Preacher
Lindsey Moser Teacher at Weaver
Chase Crandell Marion High School Boy
Stephanie Astalos-Jones Marion High School Teacher
Orelon Sidney Memphis TV Reporter
Ron Clinton Smith Police Sergeant
Jonathan Spencer Polygraph Examiner
Jody Thompson Man in Crowd #1
Rob Demery Man in Crowd #2
Anessa Ramsey Rosie
Gary Weeks TV Reporter at Weaver
Holly Firfer Tabloid Reporter
Thomas Clay Strickland Lawyer
Joe Berlinger Very Special Appearance
Bruce Sinofsky Very Special Appearance
Mike Pniewski Landlord (uncredited)
Name Job
Atom Egoyan Director
Scott Derrickson Screenplay
Paul Harris Boardman Screenplay
Mychael Danna Original Music Composer
Deborah Aquila Casting
Tricia Wood Casting
Day Permuy Production Supervisor
Mara Leveritt Novel
Susan Shipton Editor
Thomas Minton Art Direction
Jennifer L. Smith Casting
Kari Perkins Costume Design
Phillip Barker Production Design
Ashley Patterson Script Supervisor
Michael Flynn Unit Production Manager
Kristina M. Peterson Second Assistant Director
Steve Munro Sound Designer
Cody Williams Second Second Assistant Director
Ian Forsyth Steadicam Operator
Jonathan Carbonaro Digital Imaging Technician
Becky Campbell Production Coordinator
Melinda Sanders Set Decoration
Joani Yarbrough Hair Department Head
Monty Schuth Key Hair Stylist
Freddy Chancellor Boom Operator
Denny Mooradian Gaffer
Norman Bielowicz Location Manager
Walter Gasparovic First Assistant Director
Laura Katz Music Supervisor
Marc Dobiecki Camera Operator
Lee Blasingame First Assistant Camera
Tina Rowden Still Photographer
Elizabeth Himelstein Dialect Coach
Kimberly Jones Makeup Department Head
Teresa Foshee Key Makeup Artist
Shirley Libby Sound Mixer
James Peterson Utility Sound
Chris Birdsong Key Grip
Carl Johnson Rigging Gaffer
Paul Sarossy Director of Photography
Name Title
Paul Harris Boardman Producer
Christopher Woodrow Producer
Sarah E. Johnson Executive Producer
Scott Derrickson Executive Producer
Jacob Pechenik Executive Producer
Jason Baldwin Executive Producer
Elizabeth Fowler Producer
Richard Saperstein Producer
Clark Peterson Producer
Maria Cestone Executive Producer
Hoyt David Morgan Executive Producer
Michael Flynn Executive Producer
Holly Ballard Executive Producer
Molly Conners Executive Producer
Mara Leveritt Executive Producer
David Alper Executive Producer
Jessie Misskelley Jr. Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 20 26 16
2024 5 22 29 11
2024 6 17 30 9
2024 7 22 46 11
2024 8 16 29 11
2024 9 18 27 7
2024 10 13 20 7
2024 11 13 24 8
2024 12 12 19 8
2025 1 14 21 8
2025 2 10 16 3
2025 3 5 13 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 1 1
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 3 2
2025 10 2 4 1
2025 11 2 3 1
2025 12 3 5 1
2026 1 2 5 1
2026 2 4 5 4

Trending Position


No trending metrics available.

Return to Top

Reviews

Rangan
8.0

I understand why this film did not vastly, positively recognized, even though it was taken straight from a really cruel incident. Some viewers mind only the commercial value, forget that one because they're living a useless and careless life about society. And the other reason is there is nothing wr ... ong in performance, direction or in any technical aspect, but the story itself do not fit to be a movie. It should have been documentary instead. Coincidentally, this movie was similar to the 2011 Koren movie 'Children...' which was also based on the true event. About children who go missing. Both the events took place in the early 90s. This silver screen movie looks a lot like television broadcastable item that it should be. There is a documentary trilogy inspired from this story. The motive was to bring the truth out and it was well received according to ratings and reviews. And don't forget the books. ‘‘My son is 8-year-old. He sleeps with a night light on, he did not run away from home.’’ A movie must have (1) a story to begin with, (2) characters that develop along the story and (3) finally a conclusion whether twist in it or not, happy or sad, either way it works. So what's wrong with it? Well, it lacks in development in either of above first two points and extents throughout without nothing while we are expecting a glimpse of something to happen. The fact is, no one knows what really happened, actually those who know are tight lipped because of involvement. I just can't conclude my judgement because of this movie, but give a fair point for anyone who are not familiar with this case. Not focused on a particular character, the most of the perspective in the storytelling was Colin Firth's role which was just an appearance to show I'm there but not in action. You have a couple of choices to rate this movie, one, based on the story which is real and cruel, and another is the movie that disappoints as a movie. Like I am always quite happy with the product like this, because I got to know what I supposed to learn about this 'West Memphis Three' case. Hope the new movie do convey well to the cinematic output.

May 16, 2024
KayP97
N/A

I had no knowledge of this story before watching this film, so I won't judge it as harshly as maybe some others on the facts. I particular liked the opening of the movie right before the boys disappeared and Reese Witherspoon gave off a great performance as the grieving mother. She is a big reason w ... hy I enjoyed this movie more than maybe I should do. There are questions raised as to whether she should have had as much screen time as she did, however it just gave me that much more sympathy for her to get the justice she deserves. That particularly hair pulling scene was powerful. From the end tags, it is obvious there was a lot more to this case than what we actually saw. Colin Firth did not do a whole for me, I wished to have seen more reasoning behind him and better understand his character. He felt more like an observer than anything. Same goes with the 3 suspects who did not get as much screen time as I had hoped. At first, it did seem likely the police had the right people, especially with a confession from one of them, but the film slowly took a dig at the police because they never investigated anyone else, they didn't file all the evidence and said some of it was misplaced. Was that down to laziness or incompetence? They didn't completely hate on the police in this movie, but they did have a small dig. Despite many problems I did have, I do think the movie was quite suspenseful at times and it is a well shot movie. The movie does move at quite a slow pace, but I can't say I was ever bored watching the courtroom stuff. 6/10

Oct 10, 2022