Spoiler Alert: This article contains significant plot details and spoilers for ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’. If you haven’t seen ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’yet and wish to avoid spoilers, please stop reading now.‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ closes the chapter of Tommy Shelby’s life with a tone that feels less like a shock and more like a quiet reckoning. Played with raw intensity by Cillian Murphy, Tommy returns older, frailer, and deeply haunted, living in isolation while writing a memoir that doubles as a confession. Surrounded by ghosts of his past, his dead brothers, his murdered friends, his poisoned sister, Tommy is no longer the feared gangster kingpin but a man desperately trying to make sense of everything he has caused and lost. The film leans into this vulnerability, letting the audience sit with the weight of his choices before delivering the final blow.
What happens in the final act: ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ ending explained
The story pushes Tommy back into action because of his sister Ada, whose death from poisoning is traced to a Nazi‑linked conspiracy. Unlike earlier seasons, where he chased power and respect, Tommy’s final mission is personal: to avenge Ada and strike at the people who helped cover it up. This shift makes his arc feel deeply human; he is not saving a nation or empire but trying to protect what remains of his family’s dignity. The climax comes in a brutal confrontation with Beckett, a ruthless officer tied to the plot, who very nearly runs Tommy over with a speeding car. At the last possible second, his son Duke pulls him out, but Tommy is left broken in body and spirit.That is when the film confirms what many fans had long suspected: Tommy does not survive. Lying in Duke’s arms, he asks his son to use the bullet engraved with his name, which he had prepared earlier with the healer Kaulo. In a moment that feels like both mercy and completion, Duke pulls the trigger. Tommy’s final words are “In the bleak midwinter,” a phrase that has echoed through the series as a marker of loss and resilience within the Shelby family. By choosing his own death, Tommy reclaims a shred of control in a life that has so often been about violence imposed from the outside.
The gypsy style ending
The film ends with a traditional Gypsy‑style funeral, where Tommy’s body is burned inside his vardo on a hillside, wrapped in the images of those he has lost over the years. Kaulo hands Duke the manuscript Tommy left behind, symbolically passing the Shelby story and its burdens on to the next generation. Series creator Steven Knight has said in interviews that this ending was always planned, framing The Immortal Man as a deliberate farewell rather than an open‑ended continuation. In that sense, Peaky Blinders does not leave Tommy’s fate hanging; it gives him the one thing he never truly had in life, a death that feels, in its own somber way, earned and final.

