He taught the world how to kill. Now it’s using his lessons against him
Mechanic: Resurrection (2025) brings back the world’s most methodical assassin, Arthur Bishop, in a no-holds-barred sequel that sharpens its blades and raises its stakes. Jason Statham reprises his role with signature grit, but this time the jobs are harder, the enemies smarter, and the line between target and hunter blurs dangerously.
After faking his death (again) and disappearing into the shadows, Bishop has spent years off-grid—no contracts, no contact, no conscience. But retirement doesn’t last in his profession. When a former client turned tech-arms billionaire resurfaces with a hit list tied to a global AI weapons program, Bishop is dragged back into the fold. One problem: he’s not the only “mechanic” anymore. A new generation of assassins has risen, trained in his methods, faster and more ruthless—but none of them have his mind.
Forced to carry out three impossible kills in three days across three continents, Bishop must return to his old-school precision in a digital world that wants him dead. From an underwater fortress in the Aegean to a vertical kill in a Dubai megatower, the film delivers signature Mechanic spectacle—elaborate assassinations masked as accidents, deadly misdirection, and silent showdowns in crowded chaos.
But there’s a twist: one of the targets knows him. Deeply. And the final kill might not be a stranger—it might be personal.
Directed by Dennis Gansel with a grittier, colder tone than its predecessor, Mechanic: Resurrection (2025) updates the franchise with tech-thriller paranoia, cyber-espionage subplots, and just enough emotional depth to make each bullet count. It’s not just about getting the job done anymore—it’s about who you become after the blood dries.
Bishop isn't just back—he’s out for redemption, revenge, and one final reckoning with the machine he helped build.