Thursday, April 16, 2026

Brothers Under Fire, Starring Kiefer Sutherland

Ordinarily, we would like to think a deployment to Syria would be more dangerous than a vacation in Mexico. Yet, we watched Mexican tourism understandably plummet after retaliatory cartel terror attacks avenging the druglord El Mencho shut down the nation less than two months ago. Unfortunately, Captain Jordan Wright and four of his squad face similar cartel violence when they travel to Mexico for a comrade’s wedding in Justin Chadwick’s Brothers Under Fire, which releases Friday in theaters and on-demand.

Wright is the kind of leader who always brings his men home. Perhaps he can’t truly guarantee that, given the nature of war, but he would willingly die trying. His men razz each other particularly hard, but they always have their brothers’ backs. Naturally, their medic, Alberto Castillo invites Wright, Lt. Carson, country boy Danny Watlon, and cocky Marco Hino to his wedding. It will be a dual celebration, since he just took his U.S. citizenship oath.

His fiancée, Isabella Perez, believes it will be a triple celebration, because she intends to reveal her pregnancy after the wedding. Of course, movie fans know weddings and pregnancy invite tragedy, which in turn requires payback. True to form, Stevie, the reckless brother of a notorious cartel boss crashes the reception with clear intention of making trouble.

Wright and his men will be out-manned and out-gunned, but they have far superior training and discipline. Basically, they find themselves in the position of the Magnificent Seven, except they number even less than that.

Brothers Under Fire
is a relatively straight forward action film that happens to be incredibly zeitgeisty. Unfortunately, at this point, nothing in Ian Mackenzie Jeffers and Delbert Hancock’s screenplay can be considered far-fetched. It is all “ripped from the headlines” stuff. As a happy bonus, Justin Chadwick, who is better known for period productions like Tulip Fever and Shardlake, also shows a pleasant facility for staging bullet-strafing action sequences.

Of course, Kiefer Sutherland is back on comfortable Jack Bauer ground, brooding and grimacing as Captain Wright. It might be a familiar role, but he maintains the appropriate intensity level throughout. Solly McLeod (a.k.a.
Tom Jones) also portrays the trailer park-bred Watlon with surprisingly convincing conviction. Plus, Omar Chaparro and Gabriel Camero are suitably sinister as the cartel siblings. Basically, the cast-members are either good enough or better than they needed to be.

Brothers Under Fire
is not intricately complex, but it is a film for our current times. More than anything, Captain Wright and his comrades-in-arms represent the sort of characters people want to root for. Recommended as a reality-based red meat action movie, Brothers Under Fire opens in select theaters tomorrow (4/17), including the Kent Theatre in Brooklyn.