Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man brings Tommy Shelby back into the center of a crisis after time away from Birmingham. The story turns on the return of a threat that is larger than a gang dispute or a private vendetta, because a Nazi plot pulls his estranged son and the wider Shelby circle into danger. That setup gives the film a more urgent political edge than a routine crime continuation. Tommy is forced to confront unfinished family damage, old loyalties, and the cost of stepping back into a world he once tried to leave behind.
The film still works within the identity that made Peaky Blinders distinctive: controlled menace, strategic confrontation, period tension, and a lead character who treats every conversation like a negotiation with consequences. What matters most for viewers is not simply whether Tommy returns, but what kind of pressure pulls him back and how that pressure changes the family dynamic. This page positions the movie as a continuation built around Shelby legacy, interwar danger, and a final conflict that ties personal survival to a broader national threat.