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Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man Podcast
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man Podcast
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Creators, special guests and stars including Cillian Murphy unpack the Peaky Blinders saga, in the official companion podcast for the new film.
Hosted by Edith Bowman and Johnny Dogs himself, Packy Lee.
First batch arrives on Netflix March 6. Second batch March 20.
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man premieres March 6 in select theaters and March 20 on Netflix. Watch S1-S6 of Peaky Blinders now.
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Creators, special guests and stars including Cillian Murphy unpack the Peaky Blinders saga, in the official companion podcast for the new film.
Hosted by Edith Bowman and Johnny Dogs himself, Packy Lee.
Podcast part one arrives on Netflix March 6. Part two March 20.
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man premieres March 6 in select theaters and March 20 on Netflix. Watch S1-S6 of Peaky Blinders now.
Join Packy Lee (Johnny Dogs) and Edith Bowman as they explore what defines a Peaky Blinder.
Cillian Murphy unpacks Tommy Shelby’s voice and physicality, as well as how small acting choices ultimately define the character.
Costume designer Alison McCosh explains how the flat cap anchors that classic Peaky Blinders look and the way tailoring choices can act as armor against the outside world.
Then creator Steven Knight looks at how the characters’ masculinity, ambition, and violence is rooted in the time period, from masculine societal expectations to the brutal experiences of World War I.
Finally, historian Lucy Noakes discusses the realities of trench warfare, shell shock, and the shared war trauma that would have influenced the Peaky Blinders.
Watch Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man, on Netflix starting March 20th.
Edith and Packy dig into the realities of life in Birmingham between the wars.
Cillian talks about how that industrial city is almost its own character, the ways in which it would have influenced Tommy's ambitions, and the challenge of mastering a Birmingham accent.
Steven Knight describes the way his own family stories mythologized Small Heath, informing the show’s characters, events, and even its dialogue.
Then historian Andrew Davies looks at what it was really like in the 1920s: limited social mobility, the racecourse wars, and how Hollywood gangster movies influenced UK sartorial style.
Watch Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man, on Netflix starting March 20th.
For Peaky Blinders, family can be both “shelter from the storm” and “the storm itself.”
Cillian Murphy unpacks how women are the show’s real heart as well as the importance of Tommy's relationships with Polly Gray, Ada, and Grace.
Then Edith Bowman is joined by Sophie Rundle (Ada Thorne). They discuss how Steven Knight’s writing gives women equal strength and dramatic importance, and how the focus on family allows the show to translate across languages and cultures.
Steven Knight returns to look at the show’s us-against-them loyalty in a criminal family, his focus on the real power of early 20th-century working-class women, and how Polly’s character was inspired by his Auntie Betty.
Watch Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man, on Netflix starting March 20th.
This podcast contains spoilers.
Edith Bowman and Packy Lee are once again joined by the Peaky Blinders cast and creators, this time to talk about Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
Cillian Murphy explains how Steven Knight's script for the film evolved over the years, yet stayed true to the themes of the series: family (especially fathers and sons), grief, and succession.
Sophie Rundle reveals what it’s like for Ada to become MP for Small Heath and her intimate understanding of Tommy’s mental state.
Rebecca Ferguson discusses how she got just the right accent for playing Kaulo, and the meaning behind her character's tattoos.
And director Tom Harper talks about the film’s particular focus on Tommy, who’s been dragged out of reclusion, and brought into a new generation’s war, while his own emotional scars have yet to heal.
You can watch Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man now on Netflix.
This podcast contains spoilers.
Edith Bowman is joined by Packy Lee as they explore the father-son relationship at the heart of Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
Cillian Murphy looks at Tommy’s fractured relationship with his son, Duke and how it evolves over the course of the film.
Then Steven Knight unpacks the rich symbolism in the pigsty fight between Tommy and Duke — and explores the way Tommy and Beckett, played by Tim Roth, become competing father figures to Duke.
We hear from Roth himself about his own connection to World War II and how that influenced his character choices.
And finally, Barry Keoghan discusses the way he portrayed Duke: as both a reflection of Tommy, and also a rejection of him.
You can watch Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man now on Netflix.
This podcast contains spoilers.
In the final episode of the podcast, the cast and creators explore the personal and cultural impact of Peaky Blinders.
Cillian Murphy reflects on having spent a quarter of his life playing Tommy Shelby, the journey the character has taken from the series’ first episodes to the last minutes of the film, and how he came to know Tommy so well, he sometimes improvised his dialogue — or did away with words entirely.
Then creator Steven Knight, and cast members Barry Keoghan, Sophie Rundle, and Rebecca Ferguson offer their perspectives on Tommy’s legacy. But it’s the one and only Packy Lee who gets the last word on what it means to be a Peaky Blinder.








