Leonardo DiCaprio's 2008 spy thriller Body of Lies has been added to Netflix in the UK and Ireland.
Directed by Gladiator's Ridley Scott, the film stars Russell Crowe, Mark Strong and Golshifteh Farahani alongside DiCaprio. It also features a pre-Star Wars Oscar Isaac.
Body of Lies sees DiCaprio as CIA agent Roger Ferris who hatches a bold and dangerous plan to capture Al-Saleem, the head of an independent terrorist group based in Jordan and aligned with Al-Qaeda.
Ferris enlists Ed Hoffman (Crowe) to help him with the plot, while having to keep it a secret from the head of Jordanian intelligence Hani (Strong) as he will lose his own life if he finds out.
Back in 2008, Digital Spy praised the film as "a gripping if uncomfortable watch", adding: "It trades in the sheen, glamour and established conventions of the spy genre in favour of chasing something closer to the truth."
Related: Dwayne Johnson and Leonardo DiCaprio team up for crime drama
What to Read Next
On Rotten Tomatoes, Body of Lies has a 55% rating from critics and a 62% rating from users.
Meanwhile, DiCaprio will next be seen in Paul Thomas Anderson comedy One Battle After Another.
The film's first trailer was released last month and sees the actor as a former revolutionary, who reunites with his old group of rebels to rescue his daughter after their old enemy resurfaces.
Related: Leonardo DiCaprio's real-life serial killer movie is happening again
The film's star-studded cast also includes Sean Penn, Benicio del Toro, Teyana Taylor, Regina Hall and singer Alana Haim.
One Battle After Another is loosely based on Thomas Pynchon's 1990 novel Vineland, with the director previously adapting the author's work for 2014's Inherent Vice.
DiCaprio will also soon be teaming up with Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt for an upcoming crime drama set in Hawaii and directed by Martin Scorsese.
Reporter, Digital Spy
Stephanie is a freelance news writer, who previously covered WWE and AEW for Digital Spy.
After graduating with a degree in history from Queen Mary University, London, she studied journalism at Birkbeck University.
Outside of her work at Digital Spy, she writes about pop culture, with a special focus towards Irish media and how it intersects with politics.
You can read more of her work on her Substack page.

















