"Some wars are fought with guns. Others are written in scars."
The Raid 3 doesn’t climb floors. It descends into hell.
Set three years after the chaos of Jakarta’s tower slaughter, Ghost Protocol plunges into the smoldering aftermath. Rama (Iko Uwais), presumed dead, has been living in exile — bones broken, spirit frayed, family vanished into witness protection. But violence, like a virus, never dies. It just spreads.
The syndicates have evolved. They’ve gone digital, international, untraceable. And someone is pulling strings across borders, using Rama’s name as legend… and bait. When a series of assassinations begin targeting corrupt officials tied to the same drug network Rama once dismantled, whispers echo in the underworld: he’s back.
But this Rama isn’t seeking justice. He’s trying to stop a new breed of killer — young, precise, born in post-Raid chaos — and they believe in cleansing through blood. Jakarta’s streets become a battleground of knife-edge loyalties and mythic violence, as Rama must go deeper than ever: into underground arenas, corporate fortresses, and the one place he swore never to return — the remains of the tower.
Directed with surgical brutality and poetic fury, The Raid 3 is both a requiem and a resurrection. It’s no longer about escape. It’s about ending the cycle — or becoming the next ghost in the system.