SISU 2

SISU 2 (2026) Jorma Tommila, Stephen Lang, Richard Brake, Tommi Korpela

In SISU 2 (2026), the legend of Aatami Korpi does not fade—it evolves into something even more relentless, more mythic, and more terrifying to those who stand in his way. After surviving the unimaginable horrors of war and carving his name into the frozen lands of Finland, Aatami is no longer just a man. He is a symbol—of endurance, of silence, and of a will that refuses to break, no matter the cost.

Years have passed since the war ended, but peace has proven to be just another illusion. The scars left behind by conflict run deeper than the frozen soil Aatami once crossed. Nations rebuild, power shifts, and new forces emerge in the shadows—forces that seek control, wealth, and dominance in a world still healing from destruction.

When a ruthless international faction begins exploiting war-torn territories for hidden resources, their operations uncover something they were never meant to find: a trail leading straight to Aatami Korpi. What they see is not a man seeking trouble, but a relic of war they believe they can eliminate. What they don’t understand is that Aatami is not something you hunt. He is something you survive—if you’re lucky.

Stephen Lang steps into the role of a hardened military commander, a man who has seen enough war to believe that fear is a weakness long buried. Cold, strategic, and utterly ruthless, he leads a private force armed with modern weapons and backed by powerful interests. To him, Aatami is nothing more than a ghost story waiting to be erased. But as his men begin to disappear one by one in the harsh wilderness, he realizes too late that some legends exist for a reason.

Richard Brake brings a chilling presence as a sadistic enforcer within the faction—someone who thrives on chaos and brutality. Unlike others, he doesn’t underestimate Aatami. In fact, he welcomes the hunt, believing that facing such a force of nature is the ultimate test of his own cruelty. This creates a terrifying dynamic, where predator meets predator in a deadly game with no rules.

Tommi Korpela returns, grounding the story with a connection to Aatami’s past—a reminder that beneath the silence and violence lies a man shaped by loss, loyalty, and a world that forced him to become what he is.

What sets SISU 2 apart is not just its explosive action, but the way it transforms survival into something almost spiritual. The vast, unforgiving landscapes—snow-covered forests, abandoned war zones, and desolate mountains—become more than just settings. They reflect Aatami himself: cold, enduring, and impossible to conquer.

The action is raw, brutal, and unflinching. Every confrontation feels personal, every moment of violence earned. There are no grand speeches, no unnecessary words—only the sound of breath in freezing air, the echo of footsteps in empty terrain, and the sudden, explosive force of a man who knows exactly when to strike. Aatami doesn’t fight for glory. He fights because survival is the only language he understands.

As the story unfolds, it becomes clear that this is no longer just about protecting gold or escaping enemies. It is about something deeper—the idea that some people carry within them a force that cannot be broken by war, by time, or by fear. Aatami represents that force. He is not driven by revenge, but by something far more powerful: an unshakable refusal to surrender.

The film builds toward a final confrontation that strips everything down to its core—man versus man, will versus will. No armies, no distance, no escape. Just the raw essence of survival. And in that moment, the true meaning of “sisu”—that uniquely Finnish concept of grit, courage, and relentless determination—reveals itself in its purest form.

SISU 2 (2026) is not just a sequel. It is a continuation of a legend, a meditation on resilience, and a reminder that in a world constantly trying to break you, the greatest power is simply refusing to stay down.