Diablo (2025) is the Must-See Action Movie of the Summer

June 12, 2025 (NYC)Diablo (2025) is the Must-See Action Movie of the Summer.   A look at Diablo, the latest martial arts collaboration between Scott Adkins and Marko Zaror hits US theaters and streaming services tomorrow. Here is a synopsis and review of this Grindhouse Entertainment Group release.

SYNOPSIS:

After his release from prison, one man makes it his mission to right a terrible wrong by revealing a secret that could end his life. Scott Adkins stars as Kris Chaney, a warrior who seizes the daughter of a Colombian gangster to fulfill a noble promise to the young girl’s mother. When her father enlists both the criminal underworld and the terrifying psychotic killer El Corvo (Marko Zaror) to exact his revenge, Kris will need to draw upon everything he has ever learned — in and out of lockup — to stay alive and keep his word.

REVIEW:

Diablo is the latest collaboration from three dynamic martial arts, action genre craftsmen; Scott Adkins, Marko Zaror, and, Director, Ernesto Díaz Espinoza. The synergy of these three artists has resulted in a martial arts action film that is significantly great than the sum of  its parts.  This is one of the best action films released in years.

The story involves a recently released prisoner, played by Adkins, looking to seek revenge against his former crime partner and reveal long kept secrets that have the power to upend that partner’s privileged life.   The mission is complicated by the tenacity and resistance of Adkins’ teenage kidnap victim, his partner’s daughter.  The addition of El Corvo, played by Zaror, a psychotic and deadly killer places Adkins’ mission, and everyone’s lives in mortal danger.

Diablo does what all successful, sustaining action and martial arts films do; that is, it doesn’t rely solely on the action and fight choreography to carry the film.   Diablo is a solid film.   The script is good and plays out in a well told and tightly edited way.  The filmmakers start this 91 minute rollercoaster ride by jumping immediately into the story and the action; however, the artful execution never leaves the viewer confused about what is happening, or how we got here.  This is good storytelling.

There are four (4) central characters in this film.  They are all well played and all carry their weight in service of the story.  The film’s main character, Kris Chaney, is player by Scott Adkins.  Adkins is not only a solid martial arts action star whose action film credits are plentiful; he is also an adept actor, stunt man, writer, Director, and fight choreographer.  He plays the role of  aggrieved man on a mission well in this film.   His greatest strength is in not overplaying the role.  That is a sign, to me, that he has come into his own as a screen actor that transcends the genre.

Mark Zaror’s chilling portrayal of  El Corvo is nothing short of masterful.  He strikes the right balance between No Country For Old Men’s Anton Chigurth and Enter the Dragon’s Mr Han, in Diablo, for a truly memorable villain. While Zaror’s acumen in screen fighting has always been well established, this film makes it clear that he is also a really good movie actor, as well.   I think viewers will be truly haunted by his performance in Diablo.  While Adkins is, perhaps, the most recognizable member of the cast to US audiences, it is Zaror’s  character for whom the film is named.

As for the two additional, central characters played by Alana De La Rossa and Lucho Velasquez, their performances evidence a thoughtfulness in casting.   Both are adept actors that play their parts memorably, but, like Adkins, serve the ensemble.   Weakness in portrayal of either of these roles could have jeopardized the final product.   Fortunately, the opposite was true; they elevate the film entirely.

Ernesto Díaz Espinoza, the seasoned Chilean filmmaker, whose martial arts homage, Fist of the Condor (2023), brought him to the attention of wider American martial arts audiences, has masterfully woven the elements of this film together into one of the most exciting and watchable films I have seen in years.   His long standing relationship with Marko Zaror, certainly, benefitted this production.   It is also a testament to his skills as a filmmaker that he was able to get the most out of his collaboration with Adkins and Zaror, not just as actors, but as Producers, writers, and fight choreographers.  Sometimes the outcome of too many talents in one film production is destructive; that is not the case in Diablo.

While this movie could have been told as an action film, or a drama, it is, at its core, a high level and riveting martial arts action film.   The thoughtful fight choreography is well designed, well executed, well filmed, and well edited.   While still telling a great story, the film packs considerable action and fighting into its tight run time.   We start with a great martial arts scene and the fighting does not let up.  There are no throwaway fights in Diablo; they are all exciting to watch.  Adkins and Zaror, respectively, have long histories of fight scene filmographies, yet their approach to this one is bold and unique and highly watchable.  They capture gritty combat without the use of the dreaded “shaky cam” and the audience feels every punch and every kick.   This is what martial arts film fighting should look like, but rarely does.

The three (3) filmmakers here all have a great knowledge of martial arts film history.   Adkins is encyclopediac in this regards.  That love and knowledge of martial arts films is felt in this one.  There is no way to watch these two and not harken back to the climactic fight scene between Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee in Way of the Dragon (1972). This film’s fight scenes will surely be rebroadcast of highlight reels for year’s to come.

Diablo is the best action and martial arts film I have seen this year, and one of the best in a long time.

The film is violent and brutal in parts.

I highly recommend Diablo.

DETAILS:

Diablo,  from Grindhouse Entertainment Group debuts in select theaters, On Demand, and digital platforms in the US on June 13, 2025t.

The film contains English subtitles.

review by Master Marc Zirogiannis

 

 

CREDITS

 

CAST:

Scott Adkins

Marko Zaror

Alana De La Rossa

Lucho Velasquez

Run Time:          91 Minutes

Rating:               R

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