In the Grey
★ ★
In the Grey has great action scenes and not much else in its bag of espionage tricks. Rachel (Eiza González) is a lawyer who tracks down the rich and powerful, who use legal loopholes to dodge debts. Like her targets, she operates in between what’s legal and what’s not. In the grey, so to speak. It’s an interesting premise that’s rarely explored much deeper than her opening monologue voice-over explains.
We’re thrust into this world of espionage before we’ve been properly introduced to the characters and their goals within the story’s universe. Some films can get away with this. Fuze managed to open with a compelling scenario and introduce us to its cast as they dealt with the dire issue at hand—a literal ticking time bomb. We meet these characters in action and instantly know who they are. This worked because it’s set around a specific situation, and while Fuze is fast-paced, we know who’s who, what they’re doing and why we should or shouldn’t care about them.

Jake Gyllenhaal as Bronco
© 2026 Black Bear
In the Grey plops us right down in our seats and expects us to jump right into a plot that deserves a more elaborate setup and strategic story beats than we’re given. From the start, and throughout, we don’t really care about who’s doing what to whom or why they’re doing it. The rich and powerful must be punished, which is about as deep as the film’s theme gets.
When the film starts, Rachel’s mentor, a man named Braxton (Darrell D’Silva), is collecting a billion-dollar debt from cartel drug lord Manny Salazar (Carlos Bardem). The deal goes sideways and Braxton is murdered. With Braxton dead, the payment is voided.

Henry Cavill as Sid, Eiza González as Rachel and Jake Gyllenhaal as Bronco
© 2026 Black Bear
This is bad news for corporate executive Bobby Sheen (Rosamund Pike), whose employment depends on collecting debts like this. Rachel meets with Bobby and tells her she can collect the full debt for a sizable percentage. Bobby agrees and Rachel puts her plans in motion.
Those plans include using the two men she trusts most, Sid (Henry Cavill) and Bronco (Jake Gyllenhaal)—two mercenaries whose specialties include surveillance and extraction.

Henry Cavill as Sid, Eiza González as Rachel and Jake Gyllenhaal as Bronco
© 2026 Black Bear
It’s a story that feels like it should be a complicated caper but fails to be captivating or exciting, mostly because the script seems intent on getting us from one action scene to the next. The action falls flat, because there’s very little drama between gun battles and car chases. It’s a shame, because the action scenes are fantastic on their own. Just not enough to carry a film.
The script misses its chance to build a strong bond between its main characters, and it fails to give us an adversary worth fighting against. The motives that drive the characters are paper-thin. The thing is, each character has the potential to be captivating and interesting. All the ingredients for an incredible action caper are here, but they never combine into anything satisfying.

An explosive escape
© 2026 Black Bear
This is a film that lives up to its title. It keeps itself firmly in the grey area of boring. As fantastic as they are, the action scenes are forgettable, because the high stakes that fuel them don’t really exist. An intriguing story about people working between legal and illegal methods to hold the rich and powerful accountable should almost write itself. AI probably could have written a more compelling story, but that’s just another grey area.
Rated: R for violence, language and a sexual reference.
Running Time: 1h 37m
Directed by: Guy Ritchie
Produced by: Ivan Atkinson, Dave Caplan, John Friedberg, Guy Ritchie
Written by: Guy Ritchie
Starring: Eiza González, Jake Gyllenhaal, Henry Cavill, Kristofer Hivju, Rosamund Pike, Carlos Bardem, Fisher Stevens, Emmett Scanlan, Jason Wong, Michael Vu
Action, Mystery & Thriller








