Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man (2026)

Smoke curls, razors glint, and the legend rides one last time. Cillian Murphy returns as Thomas Shelby with a performance that feels less like acting and more like controlled detonation. This isn’t just a continuation — it’s a reckoning.

Set against a crumbling 1930s Europe, the film expands far beyond Birmingham. Shadowy Berlin deals, tense London corridors, and oceans that carry secrets — every frame feels heavy with consequence. Steven Knight crafts a story that’s bigger, darker, and far more intimate than expected.
The ghosts linger too. The absence of Helen McCrory is deeply felt, while Paul Anderson delivers a raw, explosive Arthur Shelby. And then there’s “The Immortal Man” — less a character, more a looming threat that tightens around Tommy like fate itself.

Visually stunning and sonically haunting, the film blends modern music with period grit, creating an atmosphere that feels timeless yet urgent.
At its heart, this is about legacy, power, and the cost of becoming untouchable.
