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Tin Soldier Review

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Tin Soldier Review: A Story Lost in Its Own Telling

Scott Clark by Scott Clark
11 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
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The architecture of a thriller relies on a clear foundation of motive and stakes. Tin Soldier presents just such a blueprint. It begins with a government-funded veterans’ support group, “The Program,” which has curdled into a dangerous cult under its messianic leader, Leon Prudhomme.

We are introduced to our protagonist, Nash Cavanaugh, a former soldier and ex-follower of the cult, now living in a state of shattered despair. The narrative engine ignites when a government agent, Emmanuel Ashburn, recruits Nash for one last mission: infiltrate the compound of the man he once followed.

The stakes become intensely personal, as Ashburn reveals that Nash’s wife, Evoli, believed to be dead, may yet be alive inside. The stage is set for a tense infiltration story, a rescue mission into the heart of a hostile organization.

The Collapse of Narrative Logic

A story’s promise is only as strong as its execution. Here, the straightforward infiltration plot is almost immediately sacrificed for a disorienting collage of memories and visions. The film becomes heavily reliant on disjointed flashbacks and hallucinatory sequences that bleed into the present action.

These stylistic choices do not function to deepen our understanding of Nash’s trauma; they actively sabotage the narrative’s coherence. A flashback should illuminate a present-day choice, but here they seem to exist only to fill time, often interrupting tense moments with disconnected scenes of his former life. The audience is left adrift, unable to distinguish between memory, dream, and reality, making the forward momentum of the mission impossible to track.

This structural failure leads to a complete breakdown of causality. An event happens, but the corresponding reaction is delayed or replaced by a non-sequitur. Foundational questions are posed and then forgotten. What is The Bokushi’s specific plan or end goal?

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The film gestures toward a terrorist plot but never defines it, reducing the cult’s actions to random violence. What is Ashburn’s true motive for the infiltration? Without this information, the entire mission lacks a coherent purpose.

The script provides no clear answers, leaving character motivations entirely vague. The film’s brief 75-minute runtime feels both padded and incomplete, a collection of scenes from a story that appears to have been abandoned midway through its construction.

Performances in a Vacuum

An actor’s work can sometimes elevate a weak script, but here the performers are left stranded by the material. Scott Eastwood carries the film as Nash, fulfilling the basic requirements of a stoic, tormented action hero. He has the physical presence for the part, but the character is a hollow sketch.

Tin Soldier Review

Nash reacts to the events around him with a single, grim expression, but he rarely makes a decision that feels born of a complex inner life. He is a passenger in his own story. The script gives him no room to express anything beyond a monotone of grief and determination.

Jamie Foxx’s portrayal of The Bokushi is one of the film’s more curious elements. With a flamboyant hairstyle and an air of theatricality, he is visually striking. The problem is a profound failure of the “show, don’t tell” principle. We are told he is a magnetic leader, but what we see is a man engaging in odd, unconvincing musical numbers.

The performance projects eccentricity, yet it lacks the underlying menace or hypnotic magnetism that a successful cult leader must possess. Robert De Niro appears briefly as Ashburn, lending the proceedings a momentary gravitas that quickly dissipates.

His presence, like that of other capable actors including a wasted John Leguizamo and Nora Arnezeder as the ghost-like Evoli, speaks to a squandered potential that haunts the entire project. They are not characters; they are plot functions.

An Assembly of Broken Pieces

The film’s technical presentation mirrors its narrative disarray. The visual palette is consistently murky, a choice that harms storytelling more than it builds atmosphere. We often cannot tell where characters are in relation to one another, rendering any attempt at tactical action or suspense incomprehensible. The poor lighting is not atmospheric; it is simply obscuring.

Tin Soldier Review

The editing contributes significantly to this confusion. It lacks a coherent rhythm, cutting action scenes so rapidly that there is no sense of geography or impact, while dramatic scenes are too brief to carry any emotional weight. The film feels simultaneously rushed in its action and sluggish in its storytelling.

This is most apparent in the climax, a one-on-one fight that seems to have been awkwardly stitched together from disparate takes, punctuated by subpar digital effects. These issues point to a directorial and editorial approach where basic storytelling clarity has been lost.

The experience of watching Tin Soldier is profoundly frustrating. It holds a functional premise and a notable cast, yet fails on nearly every level of execution. It feels less like a film and more like a product assembled from marketable parts—a known star, a high-concept premise—without the creative investment to make those parts form a coherent whole. What remains is not a complete story, but a baffling collection of scenes, memorable only as an object lesson in how stories fall apart.

Tin Soldier, an 86-minute action-thriller, had a worldwide release on May 8, 2025. In the United States, it was distributed by Samuel Goldwyn Films and became available on Amazon Prime Video on July 23, 2025.

Full Credits

Director: Brad Furman

Writers: Brad Furman, Jess Fuerst, Pablo F. Fenjves

Producers: Keith Kjarval, Steven Chasman, Brad Feinstein, Jess Fuerst, Brad Furman

Cast: Jamie Foxx, Robert De Niro, Scott Eastwood, John Leguizamo, Shamier Anderson, Rita Ora, Nora Arnezeder, Saïd Taghmaoui, Joey Bicicchi

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Tim Maurice-Jones

Editors: Jarrett Fijal

Composer: Chris Hajian

The Review

Tin Soldier

1.5 Score

Tin Soldier is the blueprint for a film that was never built. Despite a promising concept and a cast filled with recognizable talent, the final product is a narrative shambles. It is an incoherent, frustrating, and incomplete experience, memorable only as a spectacular failure of basic storytelling. It is a film that is less than the sum of its already broken parts.

PROS

  • An intriguing high-concept premise.
  • Features a cast with significant talent.

CONS

  • Completely incoherent narrative structure.
  • Confusing editing and disorienting action.
  • Characters are underdeveloped and motivations are unclear.
  • Wastes the potential of its actors.
  • Murky and unappealing visual style.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: ActionBrad FurmanFeaturedJamie FoxxJoey BicicchiJohn LeguizamoNora ArnezederRita OraRobert de NiroSaïd TaghmaouiSamuel Goldwyn FilmsScott EastwoodShamier AndersonThrillerTin Soldier
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