The Netflix R-Rated Violent Action Thriller Goes After The Cartel With One-Man Army

By Jeffrey Rapaport | Published

If you’re in the mood for an action film big on shoot-em-up thrills and low on intellectual pretense, check out Sniper: Ultimate Kill, streaming on Netflix now. After all, the title is so abundantly charged with intensity, it practically demands attention from action fans. 

The Search For A Drug Kingpin

The movie embeds itself within the chaotic, evocative, and terrifying world of drug cartels, depicting a bloody and relentless pursuit of justice. Against the backdrop of Colombia’s lethal drug wars, we are introduced to Diego Paolo (Fausto Garrido), a Colombian drug lord whose life of crime is hunky dory–until a sniper’s bullet cuts it short. From there, Sniper: Ultimate Kill commences a complex, uber-violent narrative woven around Thomas Worthington (played by Conrado Osorio), an ex-marine wrestling with severe PTSD. His saga unfolds alongside that of Brandon Beckett (portrayed by Chad Michael Collins), a marine sniper snared in the sticky moral quagmire his profession entails. Soon, Uncle Sam dispatches Beckett to Colombia to assist the DEA, led by formidable—and formidably beautiful—Kate Estrada in their quest to capture (or kill) another bloodthirsty drug kingpin, Jesús Morales. To make matters challenging, however, Morales himself employs a notorious, feared sniper, El Diablo. With El Diablo on his payrole, Morales embodies the ultimate challenge. 

More Than Just A Violent Tale

Sniper: Ultimate Kill cranks up the tension as Estrada and Beckett wade through a swamp of deceit, betrayal, and violence, struggling as many do with the thin line separating duty from survival in the endless war against narcotics. Indeed, the film amounts to more than a mere tale of bullets and bloodshed by delving into the psychological consequences of lethal violence. Moroever, the movie examines seriously the mental scars etched into those who live by the gun. For example and memorably, Collins imbues Beckett with a certain subdued intensity aptly reflecting the internal struggles of battle-hardened soldiers. 

Your Typial Action Movie That Goes The Distance

That being said, Sniper: Ultimate Kill nonetheless struggles mightily to transcend the typical tropes of the genre. Sure, Estrada’s efforts to contend with the challenges of being a woman in a male-dominated military world lend the film some unique timeliness. But on the whole, it’s very much an action film, one harkening more to the endlessness of similar titles preceding it than breaking away into its own territory. 

The screenplay also favors spectacle over substance, relying on action set pieces to such an extent the film’s efforts to inject depth and complexity into its characters fall a little short. Still, Claudio Fâh’s direction of Sniper: Ultimate Kill, alongside  Frederik Wiedmann’s compelling score, deserve recognization for elevating the movie beyond its apparent limitations. 

The Sniper Franchise

Critical opinions are scant as the film was direct to video before ultimately being picked up by streaming services like Netflix. But the Rotten Tomatoes audience score—40 percent—more or less accords with our assessment: it’s a solid action film, but by no means a Nobel prize winner. Any action film fan will tell you that Sniper: Ultimate Kill is itself part of the Sniper film franchise (Ultimate Kill is the seventh installment). A testament to the enduring appeal of the military action genre, the franchise has earned a demonstrably loyal audience since its inception in the early 90s. Generally speaking, each film centers around elite snipers embroiled in missions spanning the globe, delving into the intricate dynamics of special ops and covert affairs. The series is also known and recognized for documenting warfare’s psychological toll—all through expert sharpshooters’ lenses. 

Stream Sniper: Ultimate Kill On Netflix

An interesting aspect of Ultimate Kill is that it is set in Colombia during its ongoing, infamous drug war. The term “drug war” itself encapsulates decades of conflict, all fueled by the country’s struggle for peace and stability against legions of powerful, extraordinarily rich producers and traffickers of cocaine, a drug derived from the cocoa plants native to the region.  

Synonymous with this era and country, of course, are figures like Pablo Escobar and his Medellín Cartel (subject of another Netflix title, Narcos). Escobar’s immense profits from narcotics funded a veritable war against the Colombian state, eventuating a period characterized by bombings, assassinations, and a palpable fear of hijacking an entire nation. 

To dive into this world as seen through a sniper’s scope, stream Sniper: Ultimate Kill today.