IMDb 0 2025 HD

Poor Man’s Executioner

Poor Man’s Executioner

2025
Crime Thriller
0 IMDB

A paranoid assassin is informed by his boss that he will soon be killed, forcing him to choose between running, fighting back, or waiting for the end.

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Jake Spear
Starring
Jake Spear / Leo Hutchens

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

tense predictable gripping claustrophobic underwhelming suspenseful psychological familiar paranoia well-acted bleak formulaic

Reviews

R
Rebecca Shaw
Mar 2, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

As a genre exercise, ‘Poor Man’s Executioner’ is functionally engaging. It sets up its dilemma with efficient clarity and maintains a steady hum of suspense throughout. The performances are committed, with Hutchens particularly menacing in his restrained delivery.…

D
David Chen
Mar 2, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

A riveting and austere thriller, ‘Poor Man’s Executioner’ is a masterful study of impending doom. The genius lies in its brutal simplicity: a man is told he will die, and the camera never leaves the agonising process of…

C
Chloe Bennett
Mar 2, 2026
2.5 / 5
2.5

This film feels like a missed opportunity. The premise of a paranoid assassin receiving his death sentence is ripe for profound existential drama or gritty, inventive action. Instead, ‘Poor Man’s Executioner’ settles into a predictable rhythm, hitting expected…

M
Marcus Thorne
Mar 2, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

A tightly wound psychological piece, ‘Poor Man’s Executioner’ succeeds by focusing on the mind games rather than the gunplay. The dynamic between Jake Spear’s frantic operative and Leo Hutchens’ ominously calm boss is the film’s compelling core, a…

E
Eleanor Vance
Mar 2, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

‘Poor Man’s Executioner’ is a serviceable, if familiar, entry into the assassin-in-peril subgenre. The central conceit provides a sturdy engine for tension, and Jake Spear effectively portrays the sweaty desperation of a man with no good options. However,…

FAQs

The premise is inherently a crucible for character development. The assassin's journey from a state of professional paranoia to active crisis forces a profound reckoning. Audiences will witness how he confronts his own mortality, questions his life's choices, and discovers what he is truly capable of when stripped of all security. The dynamic with his boss, played by Leo Hutchens, will also likely peel back layers of their history, transforming a simple professional relationship into a deeply personal and lethal conflict.