Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man review – Big screen spin-off keeps a firm red right hand on proceedings

You know, time doesn’t always fix things, and when the story picks up again in 1940, my man Tommy’s been living in self-imposed exile, trying to sort through everything by writing a book. But honestly, the personal stuff weighs on him way more than the war that’s happening between England and Germany. He actually says it himself, pretty early on: “I’ve got a war of my own, inside of me ‘ead.” It’s that internal struggle that really defines him, more than any battlefield.








