
Where Was Netflix's 'Havoc' Filmed? Tom Hardy Stars in Latest Thriller
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Netflix's latest entry into the action genre, Havoc, showcases the rugged beauty of Wales while delivering an intense, gritty thriller starring Tom Hardy. Released on April 25, the film continues Netflix's growing investment in hard-hitting action dramas led by major stars.
Set in a grim, unnamed American city, Havoc follows a bruised detective, played by Hardy, who must fight his way through a criminal underworld to rescue a politician's estranged son, all while unraveling the deep layers of corruption. Directed by Gareth Evans, known for The Raid: Redemption, the movie blends raw action with a dark, emotionally charged narrative.
Why It Matters
Havoc represents another major push by Netflix into the lucrative action genre, following successes like Extraction and The Old Guard. According to Netflix, some of its most-watched movies of all time include fast-paced action movies, including Red Notice, Carry-On, The Adam Project, Bird Box, and The Gray Man.
Though Hardy is known for roles in Venom, Mad Max: Fury Road and This Means War, this is his first original Netflix film.
Tom Hardy at The World Premiere of Netflix's "Havoc" on April 15, 2025 in London, England.
Tom Hardy at The World Premiere of Netflix's "Havoc" on April 15, 2025 in London, England.
James Warren/Famous/STAR MAX/IPx/AP Photos
Where Was Netflix's Havoc Filmed?
Although set in a fictional American city, Havoc was shot almost entirely in Wales. Filming locations included Cardiff and Barry. The production also filmed at the historic Brangwyn Hall in Swansea, which was also featured in films like Dope Girls and Proud Mary, according to WalesOnline.
Exterior scenes were filmed at Swansea's Guildhall, where Ford Crown police cars were staged outside, while the interior of Cardiff's Pierhead Building was also utilized for key sequences, TimeOut reported.
The setting of the urban scenes was crafted by dressing up these Welsh locations to mimic a deteriorating American metropolis, Screen Rant reported.
Wales is also where writer and director Gareth Evans is from and currently lives. He was inspired to film Havoc where he originally fell in love with his work, Screen Rant reported.
"The idea of being able to finish a shoot day and go home and read a bedtime story to my son was very appealing," Evans said, as reported by Screen Rant. "And Wales is where I grew up, where I first fell in love with the idea of film not just as an art form but something I could potentially do as a career."
Who Is in the Cast for Havoc?
Leading the cast is Tom Hardy, portraying a battle-worn detective entangled in a city's seedy criminal network. Joining him are Academy Award-winner Forest Whitaker, who plays a senior political figure, and Timothy Olyphant in a significant supporting role.
The film also features Jessie Mei Li, Justin Cornwell, and Luis Guzmán.
What People Are Saying
Peter Debruge, chief film critic for Variety, wrote of the Havoc: "Looking worse for wear than Bruce Willis' tank top at the end of Die Hard, Tom Hardy fully commits to the walking stereotype that is Walker, the least bad cop working Christmas Eve in a city that a) doesn't exist, b) seems to be modeled on the scuzzy version of Gotham City seen in The Penguin and c) boasts a triad-run underworld populated by an inexhaustible supply of heavily armed henchmen."
David Rooney, chief film critic for The Hollywood Reporter, wrote: "But for anyone with a taste for operatic violence and fountains of blood as shotgun and assault rifle blasts send bodies flying in slo-mo or dancing like convulsive marionettes, Gareth Evans' gritty neo-noir will be just the ticket."
David Ehrlich, reviews editor and head film critic at IndieWire, wrote: "The pleasures of Gareth Evans' long-awaited Havoc are fewer and less consistent than die-hard fans might hope from a project they've been waiting to see for so many years... but the best moments of this comically scuzzy crime saga reaffirm why the Welsh director's work is worth the hype."
What's Next
As Netflix continues to bet big on star-driven, action-heavy projects, Havoc stands as a prime example of the gritty, high-impact storytelling the platform is aiming to deliver.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
At St. Peter's Fiesta in Gloucester, greasy pole competitors brave fog for a chance at glory
Contestant after contestant ran across the pole — which is greased with lard, fish guts, and oil among other slippery substances. One by one, they all fell, failing their mission to capture a flag planted at the end. That is, until the Advertisement Sunday marked the fifth and final day of St. Peter's Fiesta, a festival honoring Cape Ann's Italian-American fishing heritage. For nearly 100 years, locals and tourists have flooded Gloucester's streets in celebration of the Feast of St. Peter, the patron saint of fisherman, shipbuilders, and sailors. Each evening, revelers gathered for live performances of Italian love songs and covers of Rat Pack crooners. Advertisement Down toward Gloucester's waterfront, street vendors sold treats and children lined up for carnival rides. On Sunday morning, the festivities began with an open-air mass at the flower-strewn altar in St. Peter's Square, followed by a procession. At 3 p.m., spectators gathered for the Blessing of the Fleet, as Catholic clergy offered prayers for the fishing boats bobbing in the harbor. For Gloucester's fishing community, long a Throughout the weekend, crews of 10 rowers, a helmsman, and a coxswain competed in seine boat races, rowing out a half-mile from Pavilion Beach and racing to be the first back to shore. On Sunday, three racing boats — the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria — set off into the fog and returned minutes later, the calls of their coxswains swallowed by the chatter of beach crowds and the low growl of breakers hitting the shoreline. But it was the greasy pole competition, with its odd mystique and can't-look-away sense of danger, that drew the most reaction from the crowd. It is a tradition that creates local Shortly before 5 p.m., a fog bank rolled in from the east, leaving spectators straining to see the pole as it faded in and out of the mist. More than 100 boats floated off of the beach, from inflatable craft with outboard motors, to fishing boats waving American and Italian flags, to kayaks to yachts. As the competition started, the crowd let out a great cheer, and boats let off blasts from their fog horns. Advertisement 'They could be jumping off right now, we wouldn't even know,' said Matthew Vallis, a retiree who lives in Gloucester watching from the beach. The competitors began their journeys, most of which ended in a quick fall. Some plummeted razor straight, others flailed their arms and scissor-kicked. One contestant wobbled out of control, but improbably made it nearly to the flag before falling, the crowd's growing cheer ending in a collective 'aww.' Another slipped and hit the pole hard, drawing a collective grimace of sympathy. Sandy Bartos, 32, was getting food with a friend and their tired, curly-hair dog Luca after spending the day in Rockport when they saw the crowd gathering. After hearing about the competition, they decided to come down to Pavilion Beach and check it out. 'We were told it was the greasy pole contest, and that's tough to beat,' she said. The festival was well-attended throughout the weekend. People of all ages crowded Stacy Avenue, eating ice cream and lobster rolls from food trucks. As the tide receded, kids splashed in the surf. And the harbor, Vallis said, was the most populated he'd ever seen it for the event: 'I've never seen this many boats.' Dan Glaun can be reached at


Buzz Feed
3 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
Underrated Queer TV Shows
Recently, I asked the BuzzFeed Community to recommend the most underrated LGBTQ+-led TV series. Here are 29 of their top responses: "First Kill on Netflix. Somewhat inspired by Romeo & Juliet. A vampire falls for a vampire hunter. Queer POC leads are not always common and very nice to see." —Anonymous, 25, NY "In the Flesh. It's beautiful, so relevant today, and the opposite of 'bury your gays.' It deserves a bigger audience. Check the trigger warnings, though." —Sarah, 35 "Overcompensating. It has a slow start, and the acting felt off initially. But eventually it grew on me, and it's really good. Great depiction of friendship and the mess of early adulthood and figuring yourself out. Can't wait for Season 2." —sallytracy "Do reality shows count? I Kissed A Boy and I Kissed A Girl on Hulu are constantly on replay at my house! Reality dating shows that have heartwarming conversations about coming out and being your authentic self along the way." —acidicswan78 "I know it's been canceled, but Our Flag Means Death still holds such a special place in my heart. I went in without knowing anything about the show, fully expecting to be queer-baited again, and was so glad to be proved wrong. It's got pirates, Fleetwood Mac, and great comedy! 🏴☠️🍊" —Anonymous, 25F, Arkansas, USA "Mid-Century Modern with Nathan Lane, Matt Bomer, Nathan Lee Graham, and the late, great Linda Lavin." —blackbird68 "Heartstopper. I wish I had watched it when I was a teen; I would have been less uncomfortable with my questionings." —silencesilence "We Are Lady Parts on Channel 4." —Anonymous, 25 Europe "Wynonna Earp. God, I miss that show." —thisisfine "It's not an LGBTQ+ show per se, but I love Keith and David's relationship in the superb Six Feet Under. It's just wonderful!" —shabooshabah "Vicious." —Anonymous "The Owl House has some good LGBTQ+ characters and relationships." —magicalcoach402 "The 2019 reboot of Tales of the City on Netflix." —Anonymous, 25 Europe "The Magicians is great, even though it kinda fell apart at the end." —bluesundae638 "What It Feels Like For a Girl." —Anonymous, 18, Britain "Hacks is also good — Ava's bisexuality really opens up the eyes of the protagonist, Deborah, to discrimination." —shabooshabah "Orphan Black." —mizk23 "A League of Their Own!! Heartbroken it was cancelled immediately; there is such a gap in sapphic rep. :(" —Anonymous, 27, UK "If we're talking about shows that feature LGBTQ characters, then I'd recommend Lost Girl." —mizk23 "My So-Called Life." —mizk23 "I loved Orange is the New Black — there were plenty of gay relationships in that show, and they were represented as normal, dignified, and loving." —shabooshabah "Big Boys on Channel 4." —Anonymous, 25 Europe "Adults on FX." —Anonymous, 18, Scotland "Pretty Little Liars. I love the fact this show has a POC queer character (Emily), but not only that, her love interest is your stereotypical mean girl character, who you would typically see in a hetero relationship. Most lesbian characters are the athlete, the nerd, etc., not hyper-feminine like Alison is." —Anonymous, 25, NY "Feel Good on Netflix." —Anonymous, 25 Europe "The Wheel of Time." —Anonymous, 31 United states "Sense8 from Netflix. A group of eight people around the globe becomes psychically linked. It has awesome representation, and the characters and relationships feel so real." —Anonymous, Emily, Wyoming, USA "My Lady Jane." —Anonymous, 17, UK And finally, there was an overwhelming number of responses about Dead Boy Detectives, so I pulled some of the best ones: "It's lovely, the actors are phenomenal, and you can tell that it was written BY queer people FOR queer people. I get misty-eyed just thinking about a handful of scenes from that show. It nails the quintessential parts of the queer experience in its eight-episode run, namely found family/community and coming to terms with your identity, and the external shame people will try to impose on you for your choice to simply exist authentically. Beautiful in every way." —Anonymous, 28, Ohio "Dead Boy Detectives has an interesting take on internalised homophobia due to your time period (a dead Edwardian is one of the titular Dead Boys) and having to overcome it. I also love that none of the queer characters ever have to have a 'I'm gay/lesbian/etc.' moment, they just start having a relationship with someone or mention a previous one that makes you figure it out. We need more of this 'it is what it is' with no grand coming out gestures (not that they're bad, just that they don't help fight the 'straight is standard' narrative, so it's nice when they're not the be all and end all)." —Anonymous "I went into it expecting a fun supernatural show, but I walked away feeling completely changed and seen for perhaps the first time in my life! I related so much to the themes of shaking off queer repression and trauma that was forced upon you by time, family, and circumstance. It's not only one of the best LGBTQ+ shows to come out in years, but it's one of the best shows I've seen in years, overall. Amazing story, beautiful representation, a 10/10 all around. I highly recommend it, and I will never stop talking about it!" —Anonymous, 28, United States "Dead Boy Detectives is such a good one! Has great LGBTQIA+ characters and approaches heavy themes with reverence, while still maintaining levity and hope. Couldn't recommend it more!" —nikolaki "Such a good show that was canceled too soon (only one season). I'm still mad at Netflix for not giving it a fighting chance." —Anonymous Are there any other underrated queer TV shows you'd recommend? Share them in the comments! Looking for more LGBTQ+ or Pride content? Then check out all of BuzzFeed's posts celebrating Pride 2025.


Business Upturn
4 hours ago
- Business Upturn
Is Vincenzo season 2 releasing in July 2025? Everything we know so far
By Aman Shukla Published on June 30, 2025, 01:20 IST Last updated June 30, 2025, 01:41 IST It's been over four years since Vincenzo wrapped up its explosive first season in May 2021, and let's be honest — fans still aren't over it. The iconic South Korean drama, starring Song Joong-ki as the stylish, mafia-raised lawyer Vincenzo Cassano, left a lasting impact with its unique mix of dark humour, brutal action, and just the right dose of slow-burn romance. Since then, rumours of a second season have only gotten louder, especially with whispers suggesting a July 2025 return. So is it happening? Here's everything we know so far. Is There a Confirmed Release Date for Vincenzo Season 2? As of June 30, 2025, here's the truth: there's no official confirmation of a Vincenzo Season 2, not from Netflix, and not from South Korea's tvN network, which originally aired the show. That rumoured July 2025 release date? Looks like it's just fan speculation for now. What Might Season 2 Have in Store? No green light yet, but that doesn't stop the fandom from dreaming big. The Season 1 finale left Vincenzo as a vigilante boss, ready for new battles. Here's what's swirling in fan chats and X threads for a potential Season 2: Bigger, Badder Foes : After crushing Babel Group, Vincenzo could face a global crime syndicate or an old rival from his Italian mafia days. Think more mind-bending schemes and epic fights. Cha-young and Vincenzo's Sparks : Their flirty banter was pure fire. A new season could crank up the romance, maybe with some drama to shake things up. Geumga Plaza Chaos : The quirky tenants—piano guy, pawnshop boss, and the rest—brought the laughs. Picture them diving into fresh antics or backing Vincenzo's next mission. Secrets from Italy: Hints of Vincenzo's mafia past left fans curious. Could old enemies or allies show up to stir the pot? These are just spicy guesses, but the open-ended finale offers endless possibilities. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at