
Netflix Series’ True End: Older, Broken, Dangerous. Cillian Murphy returning to the world of Peaky Blinders feels less like a comeback and more like a major cinematic moment. Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man brings Tommy Shelby into a darker and more brutal phase.
After carrying the role across six seasons, Murphy returns as an older and wearier Tommy. Set against the backdrop of World War II, the film places him in a final reckoning shaped by years of violence and survival. The weight Murphy brings to the role drives anticipation.
The story moves to bomb-scarred Birmingham in 1940. This version of Tommy is no longer the sharp-suited climber. He is a man haunted by past decisions, drawn back into espionage and conflict when he should be finished fighting.
Murphy’s performance reflects years of emotional history. Every look and pause carries the memory of Grace, Polly, and a family he both built and destroyed. The film presents Tommy less as a legend and more as a man paying the price for it.
Despite the presence of Rebecca Ferguson, Tim Roth, and Barry Keoghan, Murphy remains the central force. Steven Knight and Tom Harper appear to give him space rather than overwhelm the story with spectacle.
With a theatrical release followed by a Netflix debut, Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man is positioned as a true conclusion. If this is Tommy Shelby’s final walk through Birmingham, Murphy looks ready to make it count.
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