Deep Cover

2025

Action / Comedy / Crime

61
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 90% · 51 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 80% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.7/10 10 20224 20.2K

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Plot summary

Kat is an improv comedy teacher beginning to question if she’s missed her shot at success. When an undercover cop offers her the role of a lifetime, she recruits two of her students to infiltrate London’s gangland by impersonating dangerous criminals.

Director

Top cast

Orlando Bloom as Marlon
Ian McShane as Metcalfe
Sean Bean as Billings
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB 1080p.WEB.x265 2160p.WEB.x265
927.84 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  ar  cz  dk  de  gr  es  fi  fr  il  in  hu  id  it  ja  kr  ms  no  nl  pl  pt  ro  sv  th  tr  cn  
24 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 100+
1.86 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  ar  cz  dk  de  gr  es  fi  fr  il  in  hu  id  it  ja  kr  ms  no  nl  pl  pt  ro  sv  th  tr  cn  
24 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 100+
1.68 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  ar  cz  dk  de  gr  es  fi  fr  il  in  hu  id  it  ja  kr  ms  no  nl  pl  pt  ro  sv  th  tr  cn  
24 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 100+
4.49 GB
3840*1608
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  ar  cz  dk  de  gr  es  fi  fr  il  in  hu  id  it  ja  kr  ms  no  nl  pl  pt  ro  sv  th  tr  cn  
24 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 100+

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by daisukereds 7 / 10

"Clowning is an art"

A washed out Actor, an Improv Teacher and a quirky Tech guy find themselves working for the police, going undercover to bust two big drug gangs.I was taken aback by all 3 leads (one unknown that ended up being better than expected), with Orlando Bloom reminding why I find him so charming with his acting. Didn't expect to also see Sean Bean and Ian McShane, much less delivering quality roles in what seems like a low profile film.All around, a quality script that is quite entertaining and unpredictable due to the creativity of this nonsensical premise. Good dialogue, some action, and plenty of comedic moments. Easy recommendation, as it has too many good things going for it..
Reviewed by dierregi 7 / 10

Entertaining and Refreshingly Unpretentious

We've reached a point in cinema where simply telling a story without preaching feels almost radical. Deep Cover earns points for doing just that - it doesn't lecture, it doesn't moralize, it just spins a mildly absurd tale and has fun with it.The plot revolves around Kat, a failed actress with a flair for melodrama; Marlon, her equally theatrical male counterpart; and Hugh, the mild-mannered tagalong who seems like he wandered in from another movie. The trio is roped into what appears to be an undercover operation by a cop named Billings, though "operation" might be too generous a word for what quickly unravels into chaos. Soon, they're knee-deep in actual criminal dealings, forced to "stay in character" as their improvisation turns into survival.It's excessive and implausible, but somehow, it works. There are flashes of real fun, especially when Marlon, in full bluster, tries to blend in with two actual tough guys, only to be betrayed by a ridiculous commercial where he's in costume, mugging for the camera. It's silly, self-aware, and just meta enough.Perfectly watchable popcorn fare, even if the scent of a sequel is already wafting in the air-and not in a good way.
Reviewed by frank-liesenborgs 8 / 10

From Pizza Ads to the Mob: 3 Improv Rejects, 5 Drug Deals, and 1 Brilliant Comedy - Deep Cover Delivers."

A home run from Amazon Prime and a stark reminder that when the casting is right, even the silliest concept can be an absolute hit.3 Misfits. 5 mobsters. 100 minutes of chaos, or 3 Wannabe actors. 4 criminal escapades and 1 hilarious heist?3 Amateurs. 7 bad guys and endless laughs?Directed by Tom Kingsley and co-written by Colin Trevorrow. Deep Cover is a buddy crime comedy that fuses absurd improv energy with a sharp, surprisingly structured story. The premise? A London improv teacher and her two misfit students get recruited by a rogue cop to infiltrate the mob. And somehow, it Works, and really well.And what a cast! Just perfect. Bonnie's got the smarts. Roach's got the fists. The Squire's got... a lunchbox and anxiety.Bryce Dallas Howard (Argylle - Elly Conway) gives an extraordinary performance as Kat, the fast-talking, improv coach whose life hasn't exactly gone as planned. Caught between professional obscurity and existential drift, she's suddenly in a position but handles it with enough charm and wit to sell coke back to the guys who made it.Orlando Bloom is another revelation. As Marlon, a hilariously intense method actor whose only real claim to fame is playing the Pizza Knight in TV commercials, Bloom's performance is a delicious send-up of theatrical self-importance. He approaches every ludicrous situation with the gravitas of Macbeth in a Wetherspoons. One of his improv backstories involves running away from home at five because "his inner child needed space." Nick Mohammed (Ted Lasso) as the timid and awkward Hugh, rounds out the trio. He's the office worker who took improv classes just to survive small talk at work, until he's accidentally deep in the London criminal underworld. Watching him nervously snort coke to "test the product" might be the funniest moment in British cinema this year.Together, this trio doesn't just carry the movie, they elevate the movie. Their chemistry is awkwardly brilliant, and their commitment to staying "in character" while navigating real criminal threats brings both genuine tension and laugh-out-loud moments. There's no smugness, no irony overload, just three actors throwing themselves into absurdity with full sincerity.And the supporting cast? Stacked. Sean Bean as the sketchy cop, Paddy Considine (Kevin Harrigan - Mobland) as an unhinged mob fixer, and Ian McShane (aka Winston - John Wick) growling his way through top-dog gangster role Metcalfe. Surrounding the silliness with actors known for hard-boiled grit was a masterstroke.Tonally, Deep Cover walks a tricky line and somehow doesn't trip. It's goofy but never stupid, serious without losing its bounce. The pacing is tight, at just over 100 minutes, it never drags. It even throws in a couple of clever twists to keep you guessing. And perhaps best of all? It avoids the lazy crutches of modern comedy: no toilet humor, no sex jokes, no gratuitous swearing. It's smart, situational, and character-driven.Even the score elevates the movie with tracks like "It's Not Unusual" (Tom Jones) and "We Are Your Friends" (Justice Vs Simian). Fits like a straitjacket.And absolutely, the plot is ridiculous. But that's kind of the point. And what sets Deep Cover apart is its energy. Unlike so many streaming comedies that feel stitched together in post-production, this movie feels like everyone was in sync. The actors improvise like their lives depend on it. Deep Cover is a riotous, fast-paced, and weirdly wholesome crime comedy that finds its strength not in reinventing the genre, but in committing to the bit. Powered by a cast that knows exactly what they're doing and a script that walks the absurdity tightrope without slipping, this is a film that knows how to make you laugh, care, and forget to check your phone. Whether you're here for the improv chaos, the mob satire, or just to watch Orlando Bloom monologue his way through a hostage negotiation-this one's well worth 100 minutes of your time. A solid 8/10. Better not miss this one...
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