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critic Venganza (2026)

Venganza Review: Mexico's Biggest Action Movie Nails the Stunts, Skips the Story

★★½☆☆ 2.5/5

Verdict

Spectacular stunts, thin story.

Is Venganza good?

It’s a mixed bag — a 55% Celluloid Score for a film whose technical achievements outpace its storytelling. Billed as the most expensive action movie ever made in Mexico, Venganza brought in stunt talent from the John Wick franchise, and it shows: the gunfights and hand-to-hand sequences are genuinely a level above what Mexican action cinema has typically delivered. Omar Chaparro, shedding his comedic reputation entirely, commits hard to playing a grieving veteran turned vigilante. Critics have praised both of those elements while consistently noting that the character work and plotting around them feel thin by comparison.

What is Venganza about?

A special-forces veteran loses his wife to a ruthless criminal network, then uses a sudden fortune to build a private army and hunt down everyone responsible. Carlos Estrada’s transformation into the relentless “Capitán Toro” gives the film its emotional spine, even if the film spends more time on the mechanics of his revenge than on the grief that supposedly drives it. Alejandro Speitzer and Paola Núñez round out a cast that’s better than the script often asks them to be.

Should you watch Venganza?

Yes, if you’re after pure action spectacle — this is one of the most technically accomplished action films Mexico has produced, and it’s worth watching for the set pieces alone. Just temper expectations for the story wrapped around them. Critics have been fairly unanimous that the film front-loads its budget into stunts and gunplay at the expense of building out its supporting characters or giving its revenge plot any real complexity. It’s a genre exercise, executed at a genuinely elevated level.

How does it compare to John Wick?

It borrows John Wick’s stunt team and its grief-fueled-vigilante premise, but doesn’t match that franchise’s world-building or style. The influence is obvious and openly acknowledged — the choreography and gun-fu sequences are clearly built by people who know that genre inside out. What Venganza doesn’t import is the meticulous universe-building that makes the Wick films more than the sum of their fights. Still, for a first major swing at that scale of action filmmaking in Mexico, it’s a legitimate genre milestone even where the script falls short.