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The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Poster

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

Saving the world never goes out of style.
2015 | 116m | English

(350672 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

At the height of the Cold War, a mysterious criminal organization plans to use nuclear weapons and technology to upset the fragile balance of power between the United States and Soviet Union. CIA agent Napoleon Solo and KGB agent Illya Kuryakin are forced to put aside their hostilities and work together to stop the evildoers in their tracks. The duo's only lead is the daughter of a missing German scientist, whom they must find soon to prevent a global catastrophe.
Release Date: Aug 13, 2015
Director: Guy Ritchie
Writer: Jeff Kleeman, David C. Wilson, Guy Ritchie, Lionel Wigram
Genres: Comedy, Adventure, Action
Keywords central intelligence agency (cia), spy, cold war, kgb, remake, buddy cop, russian spy, american spy
Production Companies Warner Bros. Pictures, Davis Entertainment, Wigram Productions, RatPac Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $108,100,000
Budget: $75,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Henry Cavill Napoleon Solo
Armie Hammer Illya Kuryakin
Alicia Vikander Gaby Teller
Elizabeth Debicki Victoria Vinciguerra
Luca Calvani Alexander
Sylvester Groth Uncle Rudi
Hugh Grant Waverly
Jared Harris Sanders
Christian Berkel Udo
Misha Kuznetsov Oleg
Marianna Di Martino Desk Clerk
Julian M. Deuster Assistant
Andrea Cagliesi Fishing Captain
Riccardo Calvanese Man 2
Peter Stark Guard (Checkpoint)
David Menkin Jones
Pablo Scola Harbourmaster
Harry Taurasi Mechanic
Riccardo Flammini Man 1
Francesco De Vito Night Manager
Luca Della Valle Security Guard
Simona Caparrini Countess Allegra
David Beckham Projectionist
Alexander Ananasso Italian Guard
Joana Metrass Victoria's Assistant
Gabriel Lo Giudice Count Lippi
Ben Wright The Unit (uncredited)
Guy Williams Captain Smith
Name Job
Peter Burgis Foley
Joanna Johnston Costume Design
Jo McLaren Stunts
Sarah Lochlan Stunts
Jeff Kleeman Story
David C. Wilson Story
Reg Poerscout-Edgerton Casting
Enzo Sisti Line Producer
David Allday Art Direction
Guy Bradley Art Direction
Toby Britton Art Direction
Kate Grimble Art Direction
Riccardo Monti Art Direction
Remo Tozzi Art Direction
Sarah Griggs Art Department Coordinator
Anna Bregman Assistant Art Director
Alessandro Santucci Assistant Art Director
Amanda Pettett Construction Coordinator
Danilo Bollettini Special Effects Coordinator
Emma Callinan Casting Associate
Lillie Jeffrey Casting Associate
Jane Gooday Assistant Costume Designer
Vivienne Jones Assistant Costume Designer
Charlotte Finlay Costume Supervisor
Marco Alzari Costume Supervisor
Costanza Bastanti Set Costumer
Gaia Cozzi Set Costumer
Simon Changer Music Editor
Ian Neil Music Supervisor
Dave Evans Armorer
Jason Horwood Armorer
Sharon Mansfield Script Supervisor
Jon Baker Armorer
Sarah Monzani Makeup Designer, Hair Designer
Francesco Alberico Hairstylist
Jacqueline Bhavnani Hairstylist
Zoe Clare Brown Makeup Artist
Rose Crocker Makeup Artist
Camilla Kirk-Reynolds Makeup Artist
Alex Rouse Wigmaker
Dan Morgan ADR & Dubbing, Dialogue Editor
Peter Gleaves ADR & Dubbing
Travis MacKay ADR & Dubbing
James Shannon Dolby Consultant
Andrea King Foley
James Boyle Sound Designer
Ben Meechan Sound Effects Editor
Chris Burdon Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Gilbert Lake Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Dominic Gibbs Supervising Sound Editor
Alessio Bramucci Gaffer
Chuck Finch Gaffer
John Gamble Camera Operator
Dave Hamilton-Green Camera Operator
Tony Jackson Camera Operator
Gianmaria Majorana Camera Operator
Chris Plevin Camera Operator
Marco Sacerdoti Camera Operator
Gary Spratling Camera Operator
Adam Dale Helicopter Camera
Eric Biglietto Helicopter Camera
Paul Edwards Steadicam Operator
Mike Valentine Underwater Camera
Daniel Smith Still Photographer
Kim Honeyman Digital Intermediate
Philip Hedgecock First Assistant Editor
Guido Leonarduzzi Rigging Grip
Victoria Albanese Visual Effects Coordinator
Melanie Murray Visual Effects Coordinator
Steve Pang Visual Effects Editor
Marlies Schacherl Visual Effects Coordinator
Sven Pannicke Visual Effects Producer
Kerstin Kensy Visual Effects Producer
Louise Hutchinson Visual Effects Producer
Chloe Grysole Visual Effects Producer
Angela Barson Visual Effects Supervisor
Stuart Bullen Visual Effects Supervisor
Florian Gellinger Visual Effects Supervisor
Oliver Schulz CG Supervisor
Callum Davison Greensman
Roberta Federico Set Designer
Elizabeth West Script Supervisor
James Hambidge Supervising Art Director
Christopher Learmonth VFX Editor
Mauro Aversano Stunts
Adam Horley Dialogue Editor
Paul Purdy Property Master
Guy Ritchie Screenplay, Story, Director
Lionel Wigram Screenplay, Story
James Herbert Editor
John Mathieson Director of Photography
Daniel Pemberton Original Music Composer
Oliver Scholl Production Design
Elli Griff Set Decoration
David Pearce Second Assistant "B" Camera
Steve Ellingworth Key Grip
Caterina Boselli Location Coordinator
Ben Wright Stunt Double
Cristian Knight Stunts
George Kirby Stunts
Name Title
Steve Clark-Hall Producer
Max Keene Co-Producer
Mark Mostyn Co-Producer
Peter Eskelsen Associate Producer
Jeff Kleeman Executive Producer
John Davis Producer
Guy Ritchie Producer
Lionel Wigram Producer
David Dobkin Executive Producer
Steven Mnuchin Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 41 69 28
2024 5 41 57 30
2024 6 34 54 24
2024 7 58 82 24
2024 8 42 63 29
2024 9 37 53 23
2024 10 48 110 26
2024 11 36 74 24
2024 12 32 67 24
2025 1 29 42 22
2025 2 23 36 4
2025 3 10 35 2
2025 4 5 6 4
2025 5 5 6 4
2025 6 4 5 3
2025 7 4 6 4
2025 8 4 5 3
2025 9 5 7 4

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 844 935
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 734 847
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 723 877
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 626 727
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 569 794

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Reviews

Frank Ochieng
N/A

The high-powered and hyper-kinetic ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ is a pulsating production that one would expect from the off-kilter imagination of writer-director Guy Ritchie whose flashy and furious actioners such as ‘Snatch’ and ‘Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels’ are indicative of the filmmaker’s ... excess frivolity. So it is not much of a shock that Ritchie’s big screen adaptation of the iconic 60s television series that featured the retro-suave Robert Vaughn and golden-haired heart-breaker David McCallum takes on a sleek, stylish and impishly erratic mix of intrigue and frolic. The consensus is that ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ continues the wave of nifty and naughty-minded colourful espionage spectacles that seem to have invaded the summer of 2015. Perhaps when one cries ‘U.N.C.L.E.’ it will not be as challenging or convincingly crafty as the more cerebral and stimulating ‘Mission: Impossible-Rogue Nation’. Still, Ritchie’s off-beat serving of ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ is mindless fun and roguishly cheeky. Sure, at times the boisterous bounce in ‘U.N.C.L.E/’ feels rather strained as Ritchie’s foray into the James Bond-esque territory featuring the off-balance smoothness of twitchy twosome Brit Henry Cavill (the ‘Man of Steel’ star portraying American CIA Agent Napoleon Solo) and Armie Hammer (incidentally sporting a catchy and clever moniker) as Russian KGB Agent Illya Kuryakin spirals into a cliched cavalcade of mischievousness drowned out by surging surf music, crazy-minded and bright-coloured landscapes, perfect-looking protagonists and wildly penetrating predicaments in its manufactured action sequences. Nevertheless, ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ still generates a sense of rousing charm and insane impishness to carry out its agenda for off-the-cuff espionage escapist frolicking. Some may not mind the make-up of ‘U.N.C.L.E.’ as a saucy buddy action flick in disguise as Cavill and Hammer drolly inhabit the kooky coolness of TV’s dynamic duo spies from yesteryear. Nobody will ever claim that Cavill and Hammer are trying to ape the small screen spying antics of original U.N.C.L.E. bad boys in the aforementioned Vaughn and McCallum any time soon. The exaggerated juiced-up chase scenes, the inclusion of high-volume spunk and wit, devious femme fatales that parade around as hormonal trophies…all add to the high-wire hedonism of Ritchie’s off-centered international gun-toting caper. Ritchie’s co-written screenplay, along with Lionel Wigham of ‘Sherlock Holmes’ fame with ‘Harry Potter’ producer credits, does not provide much of a deep-seeded story other than its need to indulge the audience in its shifty shenanigans as an over-the-top ode to a classic couple of televised operatives that baby-boomers will fondly recall from their childhood reminiscences. The premise is somewhat painfully familiar as two clashing spy guys with different approaches to the espionage game join at the hip to stop a madman planning to engineer nuclear destruction for a vulnerable world. Of course, in attempting to stop such unthinkable madness we are overcome with the philosophical tactics and mannerisms of the targeted tandem looking to spread some spice along the way in saving the world from certain cartoonish devastation. Solo is the capable cad whose free-spirit and ease on handling a sticky situation is met with instinctive, cavalier American ingenuity. Kuryakin, on the other hand, seems to be disciplined in his uptight ‘play-it-by-the-book’ demeanor as the cold Russian enforcer without a sense of straying from his boundaries. Together, this debonair ‘ying-and-yang’ pair of free-wheeling agents form as one in their mission to foil the demented deed of others. Isn’t that special? In essence, ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ believes in its wheeling-and-dealing hype and that is not necessarily a bad thing. It does not pretend to be anything other than what it is at large, a spry, jet-setting caper where playful doom and gloom is played out against a backdrop of elegant locales not to mention a spruced-up soundtrack to accompany the animated proceedings. As usual Ritchie punctuates his theatrical releases with loose-minded lunacy happening at a fast pace. The outlandishness of ‘U.N.C.L.E.’ is truly true to form in the tradition of the funky and frenetic fables that Ritchie loves to spin at will. Both Cavill and Hammer seem to get inspiration out of their dressy roles as the inventive spies with a knack for carousing and chaos. The wily women that are at the center of attention for Solo’s/Kuryakin’s romancing interests in Elizabeth Debicki’s vivacious Victoria and Alicia Vikander’s toxic Gaby is refreshingly stimulating and reinforces the suspenseful jolt. As the commanding Waverly that oversees Solo and Kuryakin, Hugh Grant does not hold a candle to the late great character actor Leo G. Carroll, that was so memorable as the head honcho that pushed the buttons in the background for both Solo’s ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ and later April Dancer’s (Stephanie Powers) ‘The Girl From U.N.C.L.E.’ So here is to the jousting ‘U.N.C.L.E.’ enjoying its considerable A.U.N.T (‘A Unique Nifty Time’) at the busy summertime box office. The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (2015) Warner Bros. Pictures 1 hr 43 mins. Starring: Henry Cavill, Armie Hammer, Alicia Vikander, Elizabeth Debicki, Sylvester Groth, Christian Berkel, Luca Calvani, Misha Kuznetsov and Hugh Grant Directed and Co-Written by: Guy Ritchie MPAA Rating: PG-13 Genre: Spy/Espionage/Action & Adventure/Spy Thriller Critic’s rating: ** 1/2 stars (out of 4 stars)

May 16, 2024
talisencrw
9.0

I know Ritchie gets a lot of flak for being a Tarantino copyist, but I really enjoy the films of the Brit that I've seen so far. They're great fun and more enjoyable than the grim-a-thons that the James Bond, Mission: Impossible and Jason Bourne franchises have churned out, though I love those as we ... ll. I thought the casting was a nice in-joke, pairing DC Comics' Superman with Marvel's Captain America, and I have loved Alicia Vikander's work since seeing her years ago in 'A Royal Affair'. I thought at the time she exuded both acting chops and sensuality out of every pore and would be a real monster if she ever went international--which she definitely has, both here and in 'Ex Machina'. Though I have never seen the TV series, I felt the camaraderie between the stars was refreshing, the car chases and other stunts were excellent, and, in a year most saturated with spy films (thankfully, for enthusiasts such as I), although it tanked at the box office, I for one hope it becomes a franchise. Why put the brakes on a good thing?...

Jun 23, 2021
Rangan
6.0

> A very pleasing action-comedy with the balanced sensitive contents. Another brilliant action-comedy from Guy Ritchie. I never saw the 60s television series of the same name, but this was very convenient for his style of portraying the tough men showing off their strength. The actors were simply ... wonderful, two year commitment by the two lead guys for this project definitely payed off well and Alicia Vikander filled the feminine void perfectly. I think it was one of the best trio in the movies I ever seen, very powerful and I hope it lasts for a trilogy. The story sets in the 60s during the cold war tension between the world's two superpowers. But the film's specialty was, it does not render clash between them, instead they come together to fight the rogue forces who plan blitz against them. Very humourous, highly entertaining with a swift pace and amazing action sequences. I don't think the narration had any unique twist and turn, instead I call it a smartly written screenplay. So the overall movie was so good, but not a top-notch. My disappointment came from the technical side in some of parts, especially the bike and car chase in the last quarter that you can clearly tell a fake (greenscreen/bluescreen shot). Other than the main plot and its clever scenes, the movie did not offer distinctive features. Just taking away a ½ point is what places it on a line between good and average, but I definitely consider it a good. 6½/10

May 16, 2024
suite9229
8.0

_The Man from UNCLE_ 2015 #Action #Comedy Origin story of UNCLE 8/10 tinyurl.com/hvakyx4 🎬 🃏 👍 ⏰ 🔫 🎼 In the early 1960s, CIA agent Napoleon Solo competes with KGB agent Illya Kuryakin to find Gaby Teller's nuclear scientist father. They need to get her out of East Germany first, then follow lea ... ds to the father, who seems to be building a bomb for a rich family in Italy. Will they stop the use of the nuclear device? Will Napoleon survive torture by Gaby's Nazi uncle? Be ready to laugh; this is not a dark humourless POS like the superhero films; rather, it's a light hearted romp. *Image courtesy of The Movie Database*

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
N/A

This could never be described as Guy Ritchie's best work, and Henry Cavill really is about as rigid as that jaw bone of his - but it does have redeeming features. It doesn't take itself at all seriously; there are loads of gadgets, stylish costumes and the even a soupçon of a score that could have b ... een penned by Morricone. Set against a background of cold war mistrust, Illya Kuryakin (a comically thick-accented Armie Hammer) partners up with Cavill ("Napoleon Solo") to prevent an evil Spectre-like organisation from proliferating nuclear weapons. Alicia Vikander and Elizabeth Debicki provide added glamour - and quite a bit of what menace this rather weak effort generates. I am not sure if it is intended (or not) to be a sort of "Bond" meets "the Saint" spoof - but it's tongue is firmly planted in it's cheek; there are quite a few decent comedic sequences and Hugh Grant manages to steal the few scenes he is in - as the enigmatic "Waverly". It obviously comes across way better than the original television series, but maybe that's the problem - it is all just a bit too classy and slick when it needed to be a bit more rudimentary.

Nov 11, 2022
Arcanum101
8.0

Super smooth '60s period espionage caper boosted by some very clever modern directing and cinematography. The tongue-in-cheek humour really makes this movie work. ...

May 20, 2023
minymina
10.0

Henry Cavill's performance in this movie is nothing short of captivating. He exudes a suave and charismatic demeanor that instantly brings to mind the iconic James Bond character. His portrayal is both charming and engaging. He is without a doubt the next James Bond. Ask for the movie itself, it ... resembles a lot of the classic Bond movies from the Sean Connery era. One of the film's standout features is its impeccable aesthetics. The visual elements, from the costumes to the set design, are meticulously crafted, immersing the audience in the stylish world of espionage and intrigue. What sets "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." apart is its ability to strike a perfect balance between action and humor. The film doesn't take itself too seriously, and this lighthearted approach results in genuinely funny and memorable scenes. The humor is smartly woven into the storyline, making it a delightful watch. The ensemble cast delivers outstanding performances across the board. From Cavill's suave Napoleon Solo to Armie Hammer's intense Illya Kuryakin, each actor brings depth and charisma to their respective roles. Alicia Vikander also shines in her role, adding to the film's overall charm. The pacing of the movie is commendable. It keeps you engaged from start to finish, with well-choreographed action sequences and plot twists that maintain the excitement throughout. "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." is a must-watch for fans of espionage films, offering a fresh take on the genre with its charismatic performances, stylish aesthetics, humor, and solid pacing. Whether you're a fan of the original series or new to the world of U.N.C.L.E., this film is a highly recommended cinematic experience.

Sep 30, 2023