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Set in the rugged landscape of 1790s Britain, Tornado (Kōki) is a young and determined Japanese woman who finds herself caught in a perilous situation when she and her father's travelling puppet Samurai show crosses paths with a gang of ruthless criminals led by Sugarman (Tim Roth) and his ambitious son Little Sugar (Jack Lowden). In an attempt to create a new life for herself, Tornado seizes the opportunity to take matters into her own hands and steal the gold from their most recent heist. With her father murdered by the gang and her life in grave danger, what follows is a thrilling tale of adrenaline-fueled action, as Tornado races against time to escape a violent demise and avenge her father's death. Armed with her father's Samurai training, Tornado leaves a trail of devastation and bloody revenge in her wake. Tornado expands on that premise with a broader sense of scale and atmosphere, framing its story through the expectations of a action, mystery & thriller, western picture while leaving room for character pressure, reversals, and escalation. The film is associated with John Maclean, produced by Leonora Darby, James Harris, Mark Lane, and shaped for audiences in English. With a release noted as 2025 and a runtime of 1h 31m, it appears designed to balance momentum with enough breathing room for the central conflict to build in stages rather than relying on a single hook. Tea Shop Productions and IFC Films position the project as a title meant to stand out through mood, performance, and genre identity, while the listed rating of R (Language|Strong Violence) suggests the level of intensity or accessibility being targeted. Whether the story leans toward spectacle, suspense, emotion, or a mix of all three, the available information points to a film focused on sustained engagement: establishing stakes clearly, deepening tension as new complications emerge, and driving toward a payoff that matches the promise of the setup. Taken together, the synopsis and production details suggest a movie intended to deliver more than a simple premise. Tornado aims to create an experience in which tone, pacing, and character perspective matter as much as plot mechanics, allowing viewers to settle into its world before the pressure tightens. Even where some official information remains limited, the project reads as a deliberate genre piece with enough identity to invite curiosity, setting up a film that could appeal both to casual viewers and to audiences already drawn to this kind of story.
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