"El hombre que se niega a morir" regresa a la casa donde su familia fue brutalmente asesinada para trasladarla a un lugar seguro en su honor, pero termina enfrentándose al comandante del Ejé... Leer todo"El hombre que se niega a morir" regresa a la casa donde su familia fue brutalmente asesinada para trasladarla a un lugar seguro en su honor, pero termina enfrentándose al comandante del Ejército Rojo responsable de la tragedia que vivió."El hombre que se niega a morir" regresa a la casa donde su familia fue brutalmente asesinada para trasladarla a un lugar seguro en su honor, pero termina enfrentándose al comandante del Ejército Rojo responsable de la tragedia que vivió.
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If you LOVED the first SISU, YOU'LL FU*%IN LOVE THIS ONE
Picking up a couple of years after the event of the first movie, SISU ROAD TO REVENGE is once again written & Directed by Jalmari Helander and starring Jorma Tommila ad our stoic, silent, Atami (AKA THE IMMORTAL)
As with the first movie, this one opens with a bit of a history lesson about the Finnish & Soviet border in the aftermath of World War 2
Many families were displaced and had to leave the homes after the border redrawing and our heron, Atami, decides to head back to his family home so he can literally, reclaim it, transport the house beam by beam and rebuild it where is.
All is well that is until big bad Stephen Lang shows up and for (reasons) that I won't go into for fear of spoilers, and, off we go.
That pretty much covers the Plot of SISU 2 Road to REVENGE.
Its is not a plot heavy movie, its not overly complicated, but that is one of its strengths.
This is tight, streamlined, no fat svely 90 mins long, just like the first one (actually its 3 mins shorter than first one
(note to studios, its OK for movies to be 90 mins if that's all the story calls for!)
Like the first one, this movie is split up into chapters, (6 or 7 of them iirc) AND as with the first one, our lead Atami is a man of few words.
Like the runtime, having our hero remain silent is one of this movies strengths
Its a great example of show don't tell. There's no inner monologue, our protagonist doesn't feel the need to explain everything he's doing as he's doing it. He just does it, and the filmmakers show us what we need to see so we can get what's happening.
WE DO NOT NEED THIS '2nd SCREEN' STYLE STORYTELLING
Looking at you NETFLIX!
Jorma Tommila is BRILLANT again. It's a very physical role, its down and dirty, I cant imagine not was an easy shoot for him, but he absolutely commands the screen for 90 mins without saying a single word. He is BRILLIANT.
Stephen Lang is great too, absolutely chewing the scenery and hamming it up with thick accent (but I mean that as a compliment as thats exactly whats needed for the villain in a movie like this)
Cinematography wise, Its got a slightly more polished look than the first, still got that golden hue but its a little more subtle this time, more organic (that kinds makes sense when you compare the motivations og Gold in the first movie, and literally, wood in this one)
That actually also makes the character motivations in this one a little more, wholesome and less capitalistic.
In the first one, he was fighting for gold. In this one, he's fighting for the building blocks of his family's home
It's maybe not a fair comparison as I saw this one the cinema, whereas I saw the forst one at home. It was a rare blind buy for me as I'd heward good things about it was a damn fine looking steelbook, so I'm glad I got it.
It might be a pulpy, ultra violent, B-Movie inspired revenge flick, but its a VERY GOOD pulpy, ultra violent, B-Movie inspired revenge flick
John Wick meets Mad Max Fury Road (with a dash of Die Hard and a sprinkling of Snowpiercer).
Its gloriously violent (I'm surprised its just a 15 here in the UK and not an 18)
As I said in the opening, If you liked, the first SISU, you'll like this one.
If you LOVED the first SISU, YOU'LL FU*%IN LOVE THIS ONE
8/10 for SISU ROAD TO REVENGE
The director is apparantly gonna be helming the next Rambo Movie which is a prequel. On the one hand, when I heard the news they were making a Rambo Prequel I was a bit like, urgh. BUT, now that I know the SISU director is calling the shots, and its made by AGBO, The Russo Brothers studio.
As Leo said, now you have my attention.
That's us folks, I'll catch you in the next one.
Second, even the tiny plot, this second part can entertain as much as the first one.
Last, keeping in mind the budget, it is a great action movie. I give them credit for that. To add, I love they didn't abuse of CGI, some great old school tricks included here.
So, overall great entertainment with not great acting or story, but with tons of gory action and entertainment.
Sisu 1 turns out to be a surprise for action thriller fans and I had a lot of expectation considering part 1. Yes it delivered what I've expected.
No logic and non Stop action with brutal violence. Hell yeah! Stephen lang as an antagonist his potential not fulfilled at the finest but yeah his characterization isn't great, Good one though. As usual protoganist nailed it again with not even a single dialogue, pity that all their efforts got wasted, because it's a box office flop.
If sisu 3 is happening, expecting the same pace to be maintained as previous parts. Hope it'd happen.
The truth is that Sisu: Road to Revenge pushes that madness even further. So far, in fact, that it sometimes slips into almost cartoon-level absurdity. There are at least three scenes that cross that line: one involving a warplane, another with a tank and one where the character literally rides a missile. All moments that made me think "sometimes, less really is more". It doesn't ruin the experience, but it does take away that sense of brutal plausibility that the first film still managed to hold onto.
For anyone who likes unfiltered action, the film gives you everything it promises and then some. It's fists, bullets, chases and explosions from start to finish, without a single pause to breathe. The narrative is as simple as expected: we follow the protagonist played again by Jorma Tommila, now hunted by Soviet soldiers, one of whom carries a particularly cruel connection to his past. And honestly, that's all the story needed. Unlike franchises like John Wick, which kept expanding their mythology to the point of unnecessary complication, Sisu stays direct and focused. That straightforwardness is probably the main reason I've become a fan of this saga.
In the end, Road to Revenge is fun, visceral and fully aware of the kind of spectacle it wants to deliver, even when it goes beyond the limits of what makes sense. It's slightly weaker than the original because it loses some of the surprise factor and the restraint that made the first one so special, but as a cinema experience it's still a glorious little festival of chaos. I left satisfied, feeling it achieved exactly what it promised: pure entertainment.
Right from the start, this film feels bigger: higher budget, more scale, more impact. Bigger, better, bloodier.
What I really appreciated is that the narrative style from the first film remains intact. The chapter structure, the quiet intensity, the mythical way Aatami is framed, all of that returns. "Violence is a language and he speaks it fluently." Aatami is once again portrayed as more legend than man.
Stephen Lang as the antagonist was a real highlight for me. He's simply built to play men who feel dangerous the second they enter a frame. "They thought the legend was over. They were wrong." And that's exactly the vibe the film carries when Lang shows up.
As for the action: uncompromising, raw, and extremely entertaining. The brutality remains, the intensity rises and yes, the ending goes a bit over the top, but that fits this world and the tone completely.
"Pain is temporary, purpose isn't." That line captures the drive behind Aatami's journey.
Thematically, the film also stays consistent: "Revenge doesn't ask questions, it answers them." And the story follows that philosophy direct, brutal, and without hesitation.
If you loved the first film, this is a strong continuation. If you love 80s-inspired action films, even better. And for everyone else, this is a stylish, ruthless revenge trip that knows exactly what it wants to be.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesInitially, Helander planned to cast the film's antagonist Igor Draganov as a younger man, but when he was recommended to hire Stephen Lang, Helander became excited by the idea of having a villain of roughly the same age as the hero.
- PifiasThe film's villains include KGB officers, but the KGB had not yet been founded in 1946; it was not established until 1954.
- Citas
Igor Draganov: [from trailer] You are going to buried in the frozen ground... like the rest of your family.
- ConexionesFollows Sisu (2022)
Selecciones populares
The Year in Posters
The Year in Posters
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Sisu: Road to Revenge
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 11.000.000 € (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 4.544.481 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 2.408.490 US$
- 23 nov 2025
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 9.571.964 US$
- Duración
- 1h 29min(89 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1








