THE TERMINAL LIST: DARK WOLF (2025)

The shadows got darker, and the wolf finally bares its teeth. Chris Pratt’s James Reece may be gone from the front lines, but his legend lives on in Taylor Kitsch’s Ben Edwards—the haunted, razor-sharp former SEAL who once stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Reece. In this brutal prequel spin-off, we go back to the early days: Edwards as a young, elite operator still believing the mission is clean, still thinking loyalty runs both ways. Spoiler: it doesn’t.

When a high-stakes black-ops mission in the mountains of Afghanistan goes catastrophically sideways—ambush, betrayal, bodies left in the snow—Edwards is left with nothing but questions, ghosts, and a growing list of names. What starts as a revenge-fueled hunt spirals into something bigger: a conspiracy that stretches from war-torn valleys to D.C. boardrooms, where the real enemies wear suits and never pull triggers themselves. Kitsch delivers a career-best performance—quiet intensity that explodes into controlled fury, every glance carrying the weight of a man realizing the system he bled for is the one bleeding him dry.
The action is pure, tactical poetry: long-range sniper duels across frozen ridges, close-quarters chaos in torch-lit caves, high-speed extractions gone wrong, and one heart-stopping sequence where Edwards turns a remote outpost into a kill box. No shaky cam gimmicks—just crisp, brutal realism that makes every suppressed round feel personal. The pacing is relentless, the tension suffocating, and the emotional beats hit hard: brotherhood tested to breaking, loyalty turned to ash, and the slow realization that sometimes the terminal list writes itself.

It honors The Terminal List’s gritty DNA while carving its own bloody path—darker, colder, more unforgiving. Edwards isn’t a hero chasing justice anymore. He’s a wolf hunting wolves. And when the credits roll, you’ll feel the chill long after the screen fades to black.
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