Page Eight

Page Eight

201199 min
β˜…6.6/10
MysteryThrillerDrama

Plot Summary

Johnny is a long-serving MI5 officer. His boss dies suddenly, leaving behind an inexplicable file which threatens the stability of the organisation.

▢️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

πŸ‘₯Cast (26)

Bill Nighy

Bill Nighy

Johnny Worricker

Rachel Weisz

Rachel Weisz

Nancy Pierpan

Ralph Fiennes

Ralph Fiennes

Alec Beasley

Michael Gambon

Michael Gambon

Benedict Baron

Felicity Jones

Felicity Jones

Julianne Worricker

Tom Hughes

Tom Hughes

Ralph Wilson

Judy Davis

Judy Davis

Jill Tankard

Rakhee Thakrar

Rakhee Thakrar

Muna Hammami

Saskia Reeves

Saskia Reeves

Anthea Catcheside

Ewen Bremner

Ewen Bremner

Rollo Maverley

Marthe Keller

Marthe Keller

Leona Chew

Richard Lintern

Richard Lintern

Max Vallance

🎬Crew

Director

David Hare

Writers

David Hare

Producers

David Heyman, David Barron, Bill Nighy, Scott Rudin, Christine Langan

πŸ–ΌοΈGallery (5 images)

Page Eight backdrop 1
Page Eight backdrop 2
Page Eight backdrop 3
Page Eight backdrop 4
Page Eight backdrop 5

🏷️Keywords

spyblackmailprime ministermi5political thrillerintelligence servicesecret

πŸ’¬Reviews (1)

P

Peter McGinn

2/19/2021

I enjoyed this espionage movie a lot. It followed a major unwritten rule of spy thrillers, which is to have the hero not know who he can trust at any time, but still they kept the plot from spinning off into confusion and paranoia that feeds some espionage films. I have come to appreciate Bill Nighy’s acting more and more as I see his work. He reminds me of Mark Rylance, an actor equally skilled as the lead or in a supporting role, who doesn’t shout a lot or violently emote, but rather nails his part in the quiet, convincing moments. There is no supervillain here, no Mr. Big or Goldfinger to defeat in a climactic special effects-laden final scene. In a way, the American government is the bad guy, or even the head of the department our hero works for. I couldn’t quite decide if it irritated me that our nearly frail, nearly elderly hero could still effortlessly cause a beautiful young woman to attach herself to him, but it surprisingly (to me) remained just a flutter in the plot, not very serious in the end. I have been meaning to watch this movie for a few years and I am glad I did.

Read full review β†’

Production Companies

BBC
Heyday Films
Carnival Films
Masterpiece