Sisu: Road to Revenge — When Revenge Is a House You Take Apart Piece by Piece

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 25: There’s a hypnotic ferocity in Sisu: Road to Revenge — the new 2025 action-war film that doesn’t whisper vengeance. It shouts. Directed and written by Jalmari Helander, this sequel to the cult hit Sisu picks up where the first film left off: Aatami Korpi (played once more by Jorma Tommila) is back, older but no less relentless, and he’s carrying something bigger than rage — he’s carrying his family’s shattered home, board by board, so it can be rebuilt in their honor.

The premise is beautifully absurd in its simplicity: Aatami dismantles the house where his family was murdered, loads the pieces on a truck, and hauls it cross-country. But his torment doesn’t end there. Enter Igor Draganov, a brutally charming Soviet Red Army commander (portrayed by Stephen Lang), who returns, furious and hellbent. What starts as revenge becomes a cataclysmic chase, a road trip of destruction and redemption.

This Is Not a Quiet Sequel — It’s a Reckoning

If Sisu (2022) was a raw, lean action beast, Road to Revenge is that beast on steroids — heavier, bolder, but still unfiltered. With a runtime of just 89 minutes, Helander doesn’t waste time polishing the dialogue. Instead, he decks out every frame with practical action, creative kills, and oddball heroics.

Audiences love it. On Rotten Tomatoes, it holds a strong 96% Tomatometer. Reddit threads are ablaze: one viewer calls it “one-man-army at its best,” praising Tommila’s silent intensity and the film’s relentless pace. And yet, not everyone is cheering — some say the sequel leans into cartoonish violence, as if Helander decided “more is more” and threw plausibility out the window.

A Grand (and Gory) Production — With Notes of Risk

Here’s where the PR hat meets the realist hat:

What’s working brilliantly:

  • Character & Grit: Korpi is no silent action figure. This time, his grief, his resilience, and his taciturn soul are the emotional driving forces.

  • Stylised Action: The set pieces are inventive, brutal, and often wildly absurd — think beams as weapons, desperate chases, and kinetic combat.

  • Budget Ambition: With a reported budget of US$12.2 million, Helander and his team deliver a surprisingly polished spectacle.

  • Critical Love: Reviewers praise its unpretentious energy, calling out Helander’s stunt choreography as evocative yet grounded.

  • Nostalgic Authenticity: Fans say it’s a loving throwback to 80’s/90’s action — but with the heart and grit of a man who refuses to break.

But… there’s a thundering caveat:

  • Box Office Tension: Despite its ambition, the movie’s global earnings (~US$5.7 million per The Numbers) are modest compared to its budget.

  • Tone Teeters: Some critics worry it oscillates too much between over-the-top gore and cartoonish comedy — a tonal tightrope that could tip.

  • Character Depth: A few long-time fans note that while Korpi’s physicality is still stellar, the emotional layers feel more surface-level this time around.

  • Stakes vs Logic: One Redditor politely warned: “It’s all spectacle, but do not ask how planks and dynamite defy physics.”

Why This Sequel Actually Matters

In an era where action sequels often trade heart for scale, Sisu: Road to Revenge brings them both — or at least tries to. It’s not just a vehicle for violence; it’s a story about legacy, memory, and the stubbornness of a man who built his entire identity on resistance.

It also proves that Finnish cinema can export more than melancholy arthouse or quirky coming-of-age tales — it can deliver visceral, globetrotting action too. Jorma Tommila continues to anchor this franchise with physical gravitas, while Lang’s chilling presence as Draganov raises the stakes.

Moreover, this film is an argument for practical effects over CGI. Helander leans into real stunts, real props, and real risk — and the result is a kinetic spectacle that doesn’t feel cheap, just unapologetically wild.

The Verdict: Courage or Cliché?

If you’re in for unrelenting action, existential revenge, and heroism that doesn’t bother explaining itself — Sisu: Road to Revenge may be your cinematic catharsis. It’s loud, bloody, and oddly poetic.

But if you came looking for layered drama, emotional subtlety, or top-tier box office returns? You might find its ambition more show than substance. It’s the kind of film that demands you check your brain at the door, but rewards you with the satisfaction of watching someone rebuild everything they lost — and then destroy everything that destroyed them.

PNN Entertainment

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