Wrath of Man
(Jason Statham) is the newest hire at Fortico Security, an armored truck company in Los Angeles. Quiet, imposing, and distant, he's just looking for a job. However, when his truck is ambushed by heavily armed robbers, H reveals skills far beyond a simple security guard, executing the attackers with cold, lethal precision. This is the calculated opening of a gritty Action Movie.
The incident should make H a hero, but it unnerves his colleagues, especially Bullet (Holt McCallany), his seasoned partner, and Boy Sweat Dave (Josh Hartnett), the nervous new recruit. The film then peels back H’s layers, revealing he isn't just an ex-military operative; he is a vengeful father, Harry, whose son was killed eighteen months earlier during a botched Fortico heist. He took this job to hunt the crew responsible, using his position as bait. This sets up a tense, slow-burn Vengeance Thriller as H waits for the perpetrators to resurface.
The timeline shifts, introducing us to the crew of ex-military men and their leader, Jan (Scott Eastwood), who are planning their most ambitious and final score: hitting Fortico's central depot on Black Friday. We witness the meticulous planning of the original heist that killed H's son, realizing the casual brutality of the crew. H, meanwhile, methodically eliminates anyone who could lead him to his targets, moving through the criminal underworld with brutal efficiency. His brief yet devastating Gangland Shootouts showcase Statham's signature style of precise violence, leaving minimal witnesses and maximum impact.
The two narratives collide during the massive Black Friday armored car depot heist. Jan’s crew infiltrates the heavily fortified location, unaware that H is waiting for them. The depot transforms into a chaotic war zone. H uses his knowledge of the facility and the crew's tactics against them, moving through the halls like a predator. The ensuing Heist Action sequence is a relentless barrage of explosions and gunfire, where the lines between security and assassin blur completely.
In the bloody aftermath, H finally confronts Jan and the remaining crew members responsible for his son's death. The final scenes abandon tactical maneuvers for raw, emotional combat. H delivers his justice—brutal, precise, and utterly final. With his mission complete, the wrath subsides, and H, no longer just a working man but a ghost finally at peace, walks away from the wreckage, completing his personal cycle of devastating Retaliatory Action.