Tommy Shelby was never going to have a peaceful ending, and fans have known it all along.Years of plotting, surviving and sacrificing lead to a bloody yet appropriate conclusion in ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’, as the man who has dodged death so many times is shot as he foils a Nazi-backed scheme in 1940s Britain.
And Cillian Murphy says there could never have been another way.
Tommy Shelby’s Ending Was Always Doomed And Cillian Murphy Knows It

Murphy has clarified it, this was not a surprise move or a last minute twist. To him, and to the series creator Steven Knight, the fate of Tommy was predetermined. By the sixth season of ‘Peaky Blinders‘, the character had already left once, vanishing into exile in the series finale.
“I don’t think so,” Cillian told E! “I think that we all kind of felt like this would be the final chapter.” However, ‘The Immortal Man’ does not allow him to rest. Rather, it pulls him into a single last storm, one that connects his own personal demons to a far greater historical danger. “I really loved the way that Steve worked it out and navigated it,” Cillian explained.
“And that it was very fitting that it should be a father and son story at the end, because the whole show was predicated on family.” Murphy’s view is straightforward yet sincere: a man lime Tommy does not have the chance to ride into the sunset. Not because of all he has done. Not after all that he has lost. And that is what makes the ending weighty. It is not only tragic, but it is deserved.
‘Peaky Blinders’ Closes With a Painful Choice

What truly lands, though, isn’t just how Tommy dies, but who’s there when it happens. In a very emotional twist, his son, Duke Shelby (Barry Keoghan) is the one who has to put an end to the suffering of his father. It is a scene that is nearly intolerable, still, oppressive, and agonizingly human.
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Tommy, who was the invincible head of the Shelby empire, is made to look more vulnerable in his last moments. And in that weakness, the novel returns to what it has always been about family. This father-son relationship is what makes the ending complete, as Murphy has indicated.
The politics, the bloodshed, the ambition, everything was always based on blood relations. Ending it this way doesn’t just close the story; it brings it to a close. Even the very fact that there are enemies like Beckett (Tim Roth) becomes a mere shadow in front of that last, personal moment between a father and a son.
It’s not a triumphant ending. But it feels real. And maybe that’s the point. Tommy Shelby did not die as a legend or a myth, he died as a man, facing the consequences of a life that was always heading toward this exact moment.
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