(source: image poster and I edited with Canva)
I watched Nobody thinking it’d be a typical tough dad flick. But somewhere between a weirdly quiet home invasion and a brutal bus brawl, I caught myself asking: why didn’t he fight back and who is this guy really? That question locked me in and then the movie answered with fists.
Synopsis
Before writing anything further let me give you a synopsis.Hutch Mansell is an overlooked suburban dad who swallows life’s daily humiliations until a late night home invasion and a chance encounter on a bus yank him back into the violent skillset he’s been hiding. That puts him on a collision course with a ruthless Russian crime boss. (source : rotten tomatoes)
Trailer
First impressions
he movie starts at night and That first night really bugged me. If someone enters your home, you expect the father to protect his family. Watching Hutch hold back made me roll my eyes. I even thought, “Come on, man.” But the longer I watched, the more I realized that the movie is using that choice as a setup. It wants you to judge him, so the reveal hits harder. Later, when you find out why he didn’t react, his silence makes sense. It isn’t fear. It’s control. That flip in my mind was the moment I moved from annoyed to interested.
(source: nobody movie)
The bus sequence is where the movie really won me over. It doesn’t feel like superhero action. It feels like a real, ugly fight. Hutch swings and misses sometimes. He slips. He gets cut. He takes a minute to breathe. He uses whatever is near him. The hits feel heavy, and you see him get tired in the middle of it, then still push through. That messiness is the charm. I didn’t just watch the fight; I felt it. It’s the kind of scene that makes you sit up straight and go, “Oh, so this is who he really is.”
(source: nobody movie)
After that, the story brings in Yulian, the crime boss. On paper he is a big deal—money, men, access. He acts loud and dangerous. But when he stands next to Hutch, he doesn’t feel scary enough. I wanted him to be colder, smarter, or simply harder to read. He does the job, but he doesn’t raise the tension as much as he could have. It’s not a deal-breaker, just a missed chance to make the showdown even sharper.
Is It John Wick Clone?
A lot of people call this movie a “John Wick clone.” I get the comparison, but to me this one lives in a different lane. The fights are built around simple, real choices. If something goes down in your kitchen, you grab a tool, a plate, a wire or whatever is there and you make it work. That practical feel is the signature. Also, Bob Odenkirk looks like a person you’d pass in a grocery store, which makes it more fun when he turns it on. The shock value comes from how ordinary he seems before the storm starts.
Overall I really like the movie but let me tell you what worked for me and what didn't work.
What worked for me ✅
- That bus sequence is an all-timer. Tactile, ugly, honest.
- Ordinary look, extraordinary history. Odenkirk sells the “underestimated” vibe.
- You can feel the hits. The movie shows fatigue, pain, and breath—rare in action.
What didn’t work ❌
- Underpowered villain. Needed more menace to match Hutch.
- The early part of the movie, the night scene, that thought “why didn’t he react?” still lingers in my mind.
(source: nobody movie)
My Opinion
Now, a few honest thoughts in one flow. The action is the reason to watch this. The bus scene alone is worth it. I loved that the fights let the pain stay on the screen. heavy breathing, shaky hands, and that “give me one second” pause before going again. The character angle also works: a quiet dad who has history and knows how to handle himself, choosing when to hold back and when to go all in. The one thing that didn’t fully land for me was the villain. He talks big and makes trouble, but he doesn’t feel like a true wall for Hutch to climb. If he had been a little smarter or colder, the whole middle would feel even tighter.
The final stretch turns into loud, messy chaos in a good way. There are traps, improvised setups, and a lot of noise. It’s over the top, but it is earned because the movie spends the first half building the pressure. I liked that the ending still shows Hutch getting hurt and slowing down here and there. He wins because he’s stubborn and clever, not because he’s a superhero.
So, should you watch it? If you like grounded action where the hits feel real and the hero doesn’t look like a model, yes. This is a clean, fast movie that knows what it wants to do and does it well. For my own score, I’d call it a 3.5 out of 5 overall. The action is a 4 out of 5 for me, the villain is closer to a 3, and the total package sits nicely in the middle. It’s an easy recommend for a Friday night when you want something sharp and a little mean.
My favorite part is obvious and it’s the bus fight. If you’ve seen it, you know why. If you haven’t, you will. Tell me which scene hit you the most. Maybe you liked the final warehouse stretch more, or maybe the quiet little moments where Hutch tries to be normal and can’t. I’m curious what stuck with you.