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Havoc

No law. Only disorder.
2025 | 107m | English

(62674 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 14 (history)

Director: Gareth Evans
Writer: Gareth Evans
Staring:
Details

When a drug heist swerves lethally out of control, a jaded cop fights his way through a corrupt city's criminal underworld to save a politician's son.
Release Date: Apr 25, 2025
Director: Gareth Evans
Writer: Gareth Evans
Genres: Action, Crime, Thriller
Keywords detective, winter, shootout, rescue mission, dirty cop, criminal underworld, crooked politician, estranged son, christmas, drug deal, night club, brutal violence
Production Companies XYZ Films, Severn Screen, One More One Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $90,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 23, 2025
Entered: Jul 02, 2025
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Tom Hardy Walker
Jessie Mei Li Ellie
Timothy Olyphant Vincent
Forest Whitaker Lawrence Beaumont
Justin Cornwell Charlie
Quelin Sepulveda Mia
Luis Guzmán Raul
Sunny Pang Ching
Yeo Yann Yann Tsui's Mother
Michelle Waterson-Gomez Assassin
Jim Caesar Wes
Xelia Mendes-Jones Johnny
Lockhart Ogilvie Undercover Cop
Richard Harrington Jake
Serhat Metin Cortez
Gordon Alexander Hayes
John Cummins Jimmy
Megan Lockhurst News Anchor
Jade Ogugua Advisor
Jack Morris Meth Head Man
Gareth Tidball Apartment Woman
Narges Rashidi Helena
Astrid Fox-Sahan Emmy
Alan Leong Triad Doorman
Jeremy Ang Jones Tsui
Aaron Ly Ching's Lieutenant
Jennifer Armour Patrol Cop (Tsui's)
Clarence Smith Detective (Tsui's)
Albert Tang Bullied Chinatown Old Man
Tom Wu Wong
Jill Winternitz Angela
Stacy Sobieski Hospital Doctor
Odimegwu Okoye Police Officer - Police Station
Sharon D. Clarke Captain
Jon-Scott Clark Ticket Guy
Kage Jakubiec Medusa DJ
Samya De Meo Hospital Receptionist
Adam Bendall Paramedic (uncredited)
Arun Kapur Hotel Attendee (uncredited)
Atul Sharma Doctor (uncredited)
Bailey Cameron Joey (uncredited)
Christopher Ashman Crime Scene Photographer (uncredited)
Christopher Maleki Zak (uncredited)
Dan Brothers Police Officer (uncredited)
Darryl Bradford Driver (uncredited)
David Cheung Triad (uncredited)
Emma Kaler Driver (uncredited)
Eric Sirakian Hotel Concierge (uncredited)
Erol Mehmet Policeman (uncredited)
George Gjiggy Francis Greyhound Driver (uncredited)
Joe David Walters D.A. Collins (uncredited)
Maurizio Posteraro Security Guard (uncredited)
Mikey Fantham Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Nicole Joseph Maggie (uncredited)
Oliver Harnett Police Officer (uncredited)
Patrick Loh Angry Driver (uncredited)
Pino Maiello Junkyard Worker (uncredited)
Richard Chan Triad (uncredited)
Richard Pepper Jerry Richardson (uncredited)
Rui Shang Triad (uncredited)
Sam Byrne Lawrence Security (uncredited)
Timothy Hornor Harold (uncredited)
Volenté Lloyd Prostitute (uncredited)
Name Job
Sam Stokes Supervising Art Director
James McGeown Second Assistant Director
Kelly Valentine Hendry Casting
Andre Harihandoyo Dialogue Editor
Xavier Gens Second Unit Director
Oleg Podobin Stunts
Juliette Woodcock Unit Production Manager
Danny Hargreaves Special Effects Supervisor
Phoebe Robinson-Galvin Stunts
Gareth Evans Writer, Director
Tyler Bates Original Music Composer
Tom Pearce Production Design
Faye Boustead Art Direction
Liam Lock First Assistant Director
Joss Colin Boom Operator
Adrian Yew Erman ADR Recording Engineer
Adrian Derrick-Palmer Stunts
Sian Jenkins Costume Design
Stephanie Whonsetler Executive In Charge Of Production
Matt Flannery Director of Photography
Christina Low Stunt Driver
Cristian Knight Stunts
Matt Platts-Mills Editor
Jack Wong Stunts
Varpu Kronholm Stunt Double
Joelle Rumbelow Set Decoration
Julia Schunevitsch Stunt Double
Claire Pritchard Makeup & Hair
Elis Howell Griffiths Sound Mixer
Jacob Tomuri Stunts
Christina Petrou Stunts
Matt Levin Executive In Charge Of Production
Imogen Arthur Visual Effects Production Manager
Alexander Bracq Stunts
Sara Jones Editor
Laura Swift Stunt Double
Aria Prayogi Music
Richard Wilson Second Unit First Assistant Director
Name Title
Ed Talfan Producer
Sarah Dibsdall Producer
Tom Hardy Producer
Gareth Evans Producer
Aram Tertzakian Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 6 15 1
2024 5 7 14 4
2024 6 9 27 2
2024 7 7 13 2
2024 8 5 11 2
2024 9 3 7 2
2024 10 3 7 1
2024 11 3 6 1
2024 12 3 7 1
2025 1 7 17 2
2025 2 4 10 1
2025 3 5 15 1
2025 4 95 592 3
2025 5 212 597 101
2025 6 55 105 36
2025 7 25 36 19
2025 8 15 19 13
2025 9 13 16 12
2025 10 12 15 9

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 340 712
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 274 594
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 95 493
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 82 371

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Reviews

MovieGuys
4.0

I'm a big Tom Hardy fan, a so it gives me no pleasure whatsoever, to say that "Havoc", a film he stars in, isn't good, at all. Its not Hardy's fault, nor for that matter, is it the fault of the cast, in general. This thing fails because it crudely glues together, almost every tired cop film cli ... che you can think of and hope's it amounts to something. The result, as you might expect, is aimless, tedious, shallow and for me at least, unwatchable. I managed about half of this hoary affair, before calling it quits. In short, no amount of decent acting can survive a dismal script. A truly marginal watch, at best.

Apr 26, 2025
dagtyr
10.0

Best film I've seen in 2025. Unrelenting chaos, gore, ultra-violence. Not what I look for in a movie usually but just the right feel for our time. Plot development: unload a magazine of rounds, and then another. The writers and director keep the finger on the trigger. If you have a sense of humo ... ur you will make it. The cgi/ai overlays which usually put me off give the scenes a fluffiness with a gamer feel. Much of the camera work is like in-game play. A raw, textured, grim cyberpunk style and low bass sounds evoke a club music video style until the action kicks off. I could say Tom Hardy's intensity drives the story but the whole thing is intense, every action and character is caught in the raw. Jessie Mei Li's well-played character Ellie is the one who stands morally uncompromised in the mayhem, the innocent through whose unflinching eyes we observe with horror the unfolding crazy. My favourite scene is the night club gun fight starting with the rolling train and the low beats gathering into a breaking storm of tightly choreographed fight vignettes. Lots of great fight scenes, gun sounds and action flows. Havoc is the war of all-against-all playing out on the streets as our liberal democracies slide into a state of nature. Any attempt to make good by Hardy's character is engulfed by the force of events. Unfiltered. 2025 needs this movie.

May 10, 2025
ChrisSawin
8.0

In 2021, Gareth Evans (The Raid films, Apostle) finished filming the action thriller Havoc starring Tom Hardy for Netflix. But just like any film, Havoc needed reshoots. Due to scheduling conflicts and the SAG-AFTRA strike, Havoc sat stagnant until 2025 when it was finally released on Netflix with l ... ittle to no marketing ahead of time. Patrick Walker (Hardy) is a homicide detective who has lost everything due to what he has given to his job. Set in a corrupt US city that is never named, Walker has lost everything because he has put his all into his work. It’s Christmas Eve and Walker’s ex-wife won’t let him see his six-year-old daughter because of how much of a crooked asshole he’s become. A group of thieves steal a truckload of washing machines full of cocaine to smooth things over with the local Chinese crime syndicate led by a man named Tsui. However, right when the deal seems to be going in the right direction a group of masked men burst in with assault rifles and gun everyone down including Tsui. Two surviving thieves, Charlie (Justin Cornwell) and Mia (Quelin Sepulveda) were caught on camera at the scene and are believed to be behind the assault. However, Charlie is the son of local mayoral candidate Lawrence Beaumont (Forest Whitaker). Walker has worked for Lawrence in many hush-hush jobs and now wants out. He agrees to find Charlie as his last job for Lawrence to get out for good, but Tsui’s mother (Yeo Yann Yann) has other ideas and craves revenge for her son’s death. The days of Gareth Evans nearly dying while he shoots a practical car chase like in The Raid 2 are over as Havoc is undoubtedly filled with more VFX than both of The Raid films combined. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing as the VFX at least has its moments in the film. The unnamed city Havoc takes place in is gritty as hell. The colored fluorescent lighting of a city seemingly plagued by both constant rain and a slumbering city that never sees the sun adds incredible highlights to the film’s many car chases. There’s also the element of possibly noticing Tom Hardy’s face being deep faked onto someone else during the sequences involving heavy hand-to-hand combat. Considering Hardy has three stunt doubles credited in the film’s cast (one for driving and two for action), this is probably true. The story (or a lack of one) has also been a complaint of the film. Havoc plays out like a noir film with a mystery that isn’t entirely difficult to solve. The film has story beats that are similar to The Raid films and whether you can look past that or not because it’s by the same filmmaker is entirely up to you. Personally speaking, Havoc is an intense-as-hell action film that is riveting for all of its nearly two-hour duration. The VFX are bit of an adjustment especially since in some of the sequences involving cop cars they seem to float along on the nighttime concrete roads that are unnaturally fast. But this is easy to look past since it doesn’t last long. Havoc opens with a gnarly car chase between a semi-truck and several cop cars. The POV throws you directly in harm’s way with all of the crunching metal, broken headlights, and screaming sirens. The exhilarating sequence culminates with a whole ass washing machine filled to the brim with cocaine being thrown through the windshield of a cop car. Performance-wise, Patrick Walker is Eddie Brock but with uncensored vulgarity. There’s a sequence where Tom Hardy spits out “I’M A F***ING COP” and he’s just doing the Venom voice. But Hardy’s familiar performance in Havoc works as a guy who has seemingly become numb to everyone around him and is honestly only investing in one last-ditch effort to hopefully be reunited with his family. Patrick Walker is also very messy in appearance much like Eddie Brock in the two Venom sequels. Walker always has a Starbucks cup in his hand while rocking a full-blown disheveled look complete with the corners of a plaid shirt crookedly sticking out the bottom of a thrown-over black parka. Hardy looks exhausted as Walker with a harsh five o’clock shadow that is leaning on becoming a full beard. The “demons in hockey masks” sequence that ignites the film’s main storyline features a moment for Patrick Walker that is borrowed directly from Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes. As Walker arrives at the scene of the crime, he closes his eyes and begins piecing everything together in his mind. The masked men with assault rifles point their guns over Walker’s shoulder as everyone in Tsui’s hideout is torn apart by a relentless barrage of bullets in slow motion. Walker has become accustomed to rearranging a pile of blood and corpses into something somewhat tangible. Most of the blood in the film is CGI too, which is disappointing but it also results in some violently worthwhile visuals. Some poor man’s face is blasted all over the camera by a shotgun, which is probably much more difficult to do with practical effects. Havoc is weird because it offers a lot of what Gareth Evans is known for like messy and memorable action sequences (the entirety of the fast-paced club and cabin sequences), but it feels a bit different because of Evans's choice to lean into CGI more than he ever has. But even with that in mind, Havoc will end up being one of the best action movies of the year.

Apr 30, 2025