Levon Cade left his profession behind to work construction and be a good dad to his daughter. But when a local girl vanishes, he's asked to return to the skills that made him a mythic figure... Read allLevon Cade left his profession behind to work construction and be a good dad to his daughter. But when a local girl vanishes, he's asked to return to the skills that made him a mythic figure in the shadowy world of counter-terrorism.Levon Cade left his profession behind to work construction and be a good dad to his daughter. But when a local girl vanishes, he's asked to return to the skills that made him a mythic figure in the shadowy world of counter-terrorism.
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Summary
Reviewers say 'A Working Man' is a typical action film with Jason Statham's signature style, featuring intense action sequences and a predictable plot. Common themes include redemption, justice, and the struggle against human trafficking. Criticisms focus on the film's reliance on clichés, lack of originality, and weak supporting characters. Some reviewers appreciate Statham's performance and the action scenes, while others find the movie formulaic and uninspired. The film's pacing, runtime, and script are frequently cited as areas needing improvement. Overall, 'A Working Man' is seen as an entertaining but unoriginal action flick.
Featured reviews
Phoning it in.
For full disclosure, this was the third film I watched at the cinema and having already sat through "A Minecraft Movie" I was flagging. A film this perfunctory and pedestrian was not what I was hoping for.
Levon Cade (Jason Statham) is an ex-Royal Marines commando, now working construction for the Garcia family. When their daughter, Jenny (Arianna Rivas) is kidnapped from a bar, Cade decides to rescue her. His quest takes him from low level drug dealers, all the way up to Russian mafia bosses, as he kills his way closer to his goal.
The problem is, whilst there's nothing particularly wrong with "A Working Man" there's also nothing particularly good, or perhaps better said, nothing particularly interesting about the film either. It feels like it's made on autopilot with a staid 'kill your way to the top' storyline and mostly rote characters. I say mostly because, as you might imagine, David Harbour is capable of making something relatively interesting out of a supporting role as a blind solder, who served with Cade, and helps him on his mission.
I wasn't surprised to see that the film was made in the UK. Jason Flemyng is particularly unconvincing and massively underused as a Russian mobster, you have Emmett Scanlan is a fairly major role and there is a key turn for British TV stalwart Kenneth Collard. Perhaps the most depressing aspect of the film is that David Ayer now seems to have settled into a rut of mid-price, mid-ambition, mid-quality action films.
Again, doesn't do anything notably bad - but less than 24 hours later and I can already barely remember it.
Levon Cade (Jason Statham) is an ex-Royal Marines commando, now working construction for the Garcia family. When their daughter, Jenny (Arianna Rivas) is kidnapped from a bar, Cade decides to rescue her. His quest takes him from low level drug dealers, all the way up to Russian mafia bosses, as he kills his way closer to his goal.
The problem is, whilst there's nothing particularly wrong with "A Working Man" there's also nothing particularly good, or perhaps better said, nothing particularly interesting about the film either. It feels like it's made on autopilot with a staid 'kill your way to the top' storyline and mostly rote characters. I say mostly because, as you might imagine, David Harbour is capable of making something relatively interesting out of a supporting role as a blind solder, who served with Cade, and helps him on his mission.
I wasn't surprised to see that the film was made in the UK. Jason Flemyng is particularly unconvincing and massively underused as a Russian mobster, you have Emmett Scanlan is a fairly major role and there is a key turn for British TV stalwart Kenneth Collard. Perhaps the most depressing aspect of the film is that David Ayer now seems to have settled into a rut of mid-price, mid-ambition, mid-quality action films.
Again, doesn't do anything notably bad - but less than 24 hours later and I can already barely remember it.
Statham doing more Statham
Levon Cade (Jason Statham) is a working man. He is ex-British military. His wife committed suicide while he was away on duty. He is now struggling to raise their daughter. He works construction for the beloved Garcia family. One night, Jenny Garcia gets kidnapped while out at a bar with her friends. Levon takes on the Russian mob to find her.
Jason Statham is well within his comfort zone in this action B-movie. The action is fun. The production is pretty good and better than the average B-movie. The story is fine. Jenny should probably be Levon's daughter instead. The villains are comic-book adjacent. They should really stop asking, "Why he's doing this for one girl?" It gets annoying and dumb. I thought he should leave those missing person flyers every time he kills a gangster. This is mostly fine for what it is.
Jason Statham is well within his comfort zone in this action B-movie. The action is fun. The production is pretty good and better than the average B-movie. The story is fine. Jenny should probably be Levon's daughter instead. The villains are comic-book adjacent. They should really stop asking, "Why he's doing this for one girl?" It gets annoying and dumb. I thought he should leave those missing person flyers every time he kills a gangster. This is mostly fine for what it is.
A worse version of every Jason Statham movie
Jason Statham plays the same character that he does in every other one of his movies, of course, but A Working Man is more of a Steven Seagal-like straight-to-video effort, i.e. An extra dumb plot, big plot holes, cartoonish characters, over-the-top acting, and of course Statham has to say things like "I don't want any trouble" before beating the crap out of everyone. I could probably write a book about all the dumb things that are said in this movie, but I'll just give one: When a mother's daughter is kidnapped by a Russian crime mob, the police tell her "they don't pursue these cases." Ok well, I guess vigilante justice is our only option then.
I like Statham
Normally I'm all in for a Statham movie, willing to suspend disbelief for 100 minutes... but this is just too much. Not the plot. That's fine, genereic, done better in Taken... but the direction! The characters are dumb, annoying beyond belief, and just say and do really stupid things all the time... the female villain only yells and screams at people, at random. If this was real, her partner would have shot her years ago. Towards the end, Jenny, the kidnapped girl, shows a bravado that is completely unearned. And don't get me started in the pure cliché of every russian character in the movie. Wow. It's like the 80's called, and they want their Chuck Norris movies back!
Entertaining action film
If it says Statham on the outside, it's Statham inside. Minor inconsistencies are acceptable. It's always a joy to see him fire about 200 bullets from a 20-round magazine. And of course, he's invulnerable. I almost forgot. 😉. Very much in vogue: a young, smart and powerful woman who was placed at his side so that the male audience wouldn't fall asleep.
The only thing missing was for him to catch the flying bullets with his teeth. So, for a possible second part, one could add more. For the faint-hearted, the film exudes a fair amount of cultural pessimism. The theme of "I scare you, and then I'm the hero who saves you" is inherent in American films. As such, the plot is rather one-dimensional and not for people who prefer a more complex way of thinking. Nevertheless, we felt thoroughly entertained at the end of the film and deeply impressed by the many close-ups of Statham's heroic face.
The only thing missing was for him to catch the flying bullets with his teeth. So, for a possible second part, one could add more. For the faint-hearted, the film exudes a fair amount of cultural pessimism. The theme of "I scare you, and then I'm the hero who saves you" is inherent in American films. As such, the plot is rather one-dimensional and not for people who prefer a more complex way of thinking. Nevertheless, we felt thoroughly entertained at the end of the film and deeply impressed by the many close-ups of Statham's heroic face.
Soundtrack
Preview the soundtrack here and continue listening on Amazon Music.
Did you know
- TriviaShooting on this film commenced straight after shooting for The Beekeeper (2024) wrapped, with many of the film crew staying on in England to shoot scenes for this film.
- GoofsAt 33:51 Leven follows Wolo" Kolisnyk, Captain of Russian Mafia who takes off in a Black Mercedes S Class with silver wheels, standard stock. During the drive it's suddenly a S Class with black wheels and tinted out windows, when the captain arrives it's the standard silver wheeled non tinted S Class again.
- Crazy creditsThe opening credits montage tells the backstory of Levon Cade and his combat journey with friend Gunny Lefferty.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jeremy Jahns: A Working Man - Movie Review (2025)
- SoundtracksRun Game
Performed by Lupe Fiasco
Written by Lupe Fiasco (as Wasalu Jaco), Simon Jamal Johnson and Charles Patton
Courtesy of 1st & 15th Productions
Published by Chillys Music, Man Behind Bars Music, admin by Me Gusta Music
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Mật Vụ Thợ Hồ
- Filming locations
- Chicago, Illinois, USA(Outdoor Scenes)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $40,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $37,000,711
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $15,510,312
- Mar 30, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $88,200,711
- Runtime
- 1h 56m(116 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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