Some sequels tiptoe back into familiar territory. Others storm in like a hand grenade with the pin already pulled. SISU: Road to Revenge is the latter: a stripped-down, high-velocity action event that expands on the sleeper hit with unnerving precision.
Jorma Tommila returns as “the man who refuses to die,” a survivor whose presence feels less like a character and more like a natural force. This time, he heads back to the house where his family was slaughtered during the war. But instead of leaving the ruins as a scar on the landscape, he dismantles it piece by piece, loads the fragments onto a truck, and drives off determined to rebuild it somewhere safe. It’s part survival instinct, part ritual — a man carrying the architecture of memory across hostile ground.
Safety, however, doesn’t exist in this world. The Red Army commander responsible —played by Stephen Lang (Don’t Breathe) with ice-cold menace — returns, intent on finishing the job. What follows is less a chase than a chain reaction. Vehicles splinter. Bridges collapse. Mines bloom in the dirt. Each action set piece cascades into the next—one event triggering another in a domino line of destruction, all engineered with ruthless precision.
Jalmari Helander — once again writing and directing — drives the film with his trademark controlled fury, with the trailer alone suggesting sequences designed with the exactitude of a survival manual. The cast also includes Richard Brake alongside Tommila and Lang. The film is produced by Mike Goodridge and Petri Jokiranta, with Gregory Ouanhon and Antonio Salas serving as executive producers.
If the first film was about enduring the impossible, Road to Revenge shifts gears: what happens when survival collides head-on with vengeance?
The trailer promises one thing: relentless fire, ruthless fury, and action that could very well surpass the original — exclusively in movie theaters November 21, 2025.