Something that sets Gangs of London apart as a TV production is the pedigree of the directors brought in to work on it.

Something that sets Gangs of London apart as a TV production is the pedigree of the directors brought in to work on it.
After Apostle – an offbeat, ambitious stab at a folk horror movie from a writer-director working in his own country and language for the first time in over a decade – released on Netflix in 2018 to solid-but-not-stellar reception, it wasn’t at all clear what Gareth Evans would do next.
(FULL SPOILERS FOLLOW)
I have to imagine that the end of The Raid 2’s release cycle was an existentially scary moment for Gareth Evans.
(FULL SPOILERS FOLLOW)
(FULL SPOILERS FOLLOW)
(FULL SPOILERS FOLLOW)
(FULL SPOILERS FOLLOW)
So: at some point next year, Gareth Evans’ sixth feature as director, Havoc, is due to drop on Netflix, and it is, by some margin, my most anticipated film of 2024.
This is a guest post from friend of the site and podcast, Andrew Milne, who hosts the Two Friends Watch podcast.