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Eddie Marsan Talks the Explosive Pressure Cooker of Fraying Trust in Contained Crime Thriller ‘All The Devils Are Here’

All The Devils Are Here — a tightly controlled psychological crime thriller from director Barnaby Roper — is out today, arriving in cinemas and on digital platforms through Paramount and Republic Pictures, following its world premiere at the Edinburgh International Film Festival this past August.

Written by John Patrick Dover and produced by Ben LeClair and Leopold Hughes, the film brings together a sharp ensemble cast, including BAFTA-nominated Eddie Marsan (“Ray Donovan”), Sam Claflin (soon to appear in Taylor Sheridan’s F.A.S.T.), Burn Gorman (“Game of Thrones”), Suki Waterhouse (“Daisy Jones & The Six”), newcomer Tienne Simon, and Rory Kinnear (the James Bond franchise).

The story centres on four criminals laying low in a remote safe house after a high-stakes heist. As hours pass without contact, the group’s fragile dynamic begins to crack. Trust fades, tempers flare, and it becomes clear that the real threat may already be inside the room.

Ahead of the film’s U.S. theatrical and digital release on September 26 – with a simultaneous UK digital launch – Howard Gorman spoke with Eddie Marsan about this tightly wound psychological thriller, where tension quietly builds within the confines of a ramshackle cottage in the middle of nowhere, and the real threat lies not outside, but within.

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