PEAKY BLINDERS: THE IMMORTAL MAN (2026)


Starring: Cillian Murphy • Tom Hardy • Paul Anderson
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man (2026) is a ruthless, operatic extension of the Peaky legacy — darker, colder, and more intimate than anything that came before. This film doesn’t chase closure. It demands consequence, dragging its characters into a final reckoning where survival is no longer victory.
Set in the aftermath of the Peaky Blinders’ rise to near-myth, the world has changed — but Birmingham hasn’t forgiven. Power has matured into paranoia, alliances have rotted, and the past refuses to stay buried. The streets are quieter now, but every silence is a threat.
At the center stands a man who should have been finished…
and two others who refuse to let history rest.
Haunted, hollowed, and terrifyingly focused. Tommy returns not as a conqueror, but as a man stripped of illusion. Murphy delivers a performance built on silence and restraint — every glance carries weight, every decision exacts a price. Tommy is no longer chasing power. He’s chasing an ending.
Unpredictable, theatrical, and dangerously alive. Alfie emerges once more from the shadows — wounded, wiser, and possibly more sincere than ever. Hardy commands the screen with twisted charm, turning humor into menace and loyalty into a loaded weapon. Alfie doesn’t seek control. He seeks truth through chaos.
Broken, violent, and desperately human. Arthur’s war never ended — it only changed shape. Anderson gives Arthur his most painful portrayal yet: a man drowning in guilt, clinging to family as the last thing keeping him from annihilation. Every explosion of rage feels like a cry for absolution.
Political assassinations, underground deals, betrayals disguised as loyalty, brutal hand-to-hand violence, and psychological warfare played out in smoke-filled rooms. The action is sparse but devastating — every act of violence carries narrative weight.
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man (2026) is not about legacy.
It’s about what legacy costs.
Where power rots from the inside,
where family is both shield and weapon,
and where immortality means being remembered —
not forgiven.
A brutal, poetic farewell to men who were never meant to survive history.