
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man – Review Thread
- Rotten Tomatoes: 90% (20 Reviews)
- Metacritic: 77 (4 Reviews)
Reviews:
“The Immortal Man” has an efficient, businesslike way with the story at hand, however silly it might be. And the film works its way toward a finale of more stoic pathos than might be expected from such a canny franchise extension. Dab your eyes with your ties if you must, gents, but keep your vests buttoned.
The Immortal Man is an entertaining slice of British pulp that knows exactly what it is — and Murphy knows exactly what he’s doing in it. To paraphrase Bob Marley, if the cap fits, let him wear it.
IGN (7/10):
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man offers a no-frills wartime backdrop for Cillian Murphy to make a stirring return as Tommy Shelby, with Barry Keoghan standing toe-to-toe with his Irish compadre in a moving match-up. Serving up some dry humor with a few boisterous action set pieces and a thumping contemporary score to boot, director Tom Harper and writer Steven Knight don't color outside the box, which should please fans of the series.
SlashFilm (7/10):
The end result may not be the cleanest or most tightly-wound addition to the series, but it's as essential as it gets — doing for "Peaky Blinders" what "El Camino" did for "Breaking Bad." As the final credits hit, Tommy Shelby remains at a distant remove from us. We may never truly know him, Steven Knight seems to argue, but even he couldn't author a more apt ending than this.
What’s worked before works here just as well. Tommy Shelby persists.
The Wrap (7/10):
While neither Tommy nor the film itself was ever likely to be immortal, the closing frames prove to be a fitting sendoff for him as well as his long, sad saga. For what could very well be the last time, he and Murphy burn bright.
The Guardian (3/5):
Maybe you have to be fully invested in the TV show to really like it, although this canonisation of Tommy is a sentimental treatment of what we actually know of crime gangs in the second world war. Nevertheless, it is a resoundingly confident drama.
Collider (7/10):
The Immortal Man, while obvious at times, also gives you everything you could want in a Peaky Blinders movie. There's angst, there's violence, there's sex, explosions, and swagger. If this truly is the end of the Peaky Blinders as we know them, it’s a devastating one, and it’s hard to imagine anyone taking up the mantle as effectively as the original cast.
The Times (4/5):
The rock soundtrack thumps along with propulsive vigour, the screen pulses with stylish slow-mo from the director Tom Harper, while the top-tier acting duo of Murphy and Keoghan bring some unexpected poignancy to an otherwise familiar Oedipal clash.
by MarvelsGrantMan136
7 Comments
I think am gonna enjoy this one lads!
I’m just happy that we’re getting more of the Peaky Fookin’ Blinders.
I never finished the TV show, do I need to before warching this?
So is this in select theaters or only on Netflix?
In UK it’s shown at cinemas.
Has this been confirmed to be the series finale?
I expected worse imo
Wasn’t a fan of the last season. Too much style (slo mo walking and looking cool) and less good story
Guess I will watch this one