The first time we see Cillian Murphy’s troubled Thomas “Tommy” Shelby in “Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man,” the engaging enough Netflix film that expands on the beloved original BBC series, he’s walking alone towards the camera.
It’s a likely thing for him to be doing as the character increasingly retreated into himself over the course of the show, and cut himself off from his family in the series finale. Only in this film, picking up years after we last saw Tommy and with the horrors of World War II now serving as its backdrop, the man has become far more like the ghosts that continue to haunt…
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