The new Peaky Blinders film doesn’t just kill off a fan-favorite character—it fundamentally rewrites his entire story and destroys Tommy Shelby’s moral core, revealing a secret that changes everything we thought we knew about the Shelby family’s code.
The absence of Arthur Shelby Jr. from Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man is the film’s central, haunting mystery. For six seasons, Paul Anderson’s volatile, fiercely loyal Arthur was Tommy Shelby’s indispensable right-hand man—a man whose brutal actions were always, in his mind, for the Shelby family. The film’s opening minutes confirm he’s dead, but the truth of his demise is a narrative grenade that recontextualizes the entire series.
To understand why this revelation matters, you must first grasp the myth of Arthur Shelby. He was the family’s protector, the enforcer who took pride in his role. His mantra was simple: family above all. This code justified his violence, his alcoholism, and his frequent outbursts. He was, in the words of creator Steven Knight, a man who “spent his life protecting family. Everything was about family. The reason he gave for the bad things he did is because it was good for the family”[1].
The Official Story vs. The Gut-Wrenching Reality
The film, set in 1940, initially presents Arthur’s death as a suicide. The town whispers he “took his own life on the bridge.” Even the psychic Kaulo (Rebecca Ferguson) relays this common belief to a resistant Tommy (Cillian Murphy). This narrative is convenient, tragic, but fitting for a man battling inner demons.
The first twist? It was Tommy who killed him in 1938. A struggle during an argument about money led to a gun going off. A tragic accident born of the Shelby brothers’ volatile dynamic. This alone would be monumental—Tommy, the family’s strategic leader, accidentally killing his own brother.
But the final, devastating layer comes in a whispered confession to the corpse of his sister, Ada. Tommy admits: “I killed our brother Arthur. It wasn’t an accident. It wasn’t an act of mercy. I killed him because I was full of booze and rage.” A flashback shows not an accident, but Tommy deliberately strangling Arthur. He confesses he had a moment where he “could’ve spared him” but chose not to because he “wanted to be free of him.”
This is the core of why it matters. It wasn’t a accident born of a moment. It was a premeditated murder by the family’s patriarch, motivated not by protection, but by a selfish desire to remove a burden. Tommy didn’t just break his own code; he annihilated the foundational justification for the Shelby empire. The man who built everything on “family” proved willing to exterminate it for personal peace.
Paul Anderson’s Bittersweet Farewell: “I Think It’s Great”
The actor behind Arthur, Paul Anderson, has spoken about his character’s fate and his mixed feelings on the film itself. In a chat with LADbible, Anderson displayed the pragmatic, grounded attitude of an actor who understood the story’s needs[2].
On Arthur’s death: “Well, what can you do, eh? It is how it is. I thought I’d just leave them to it. I think it’s great.”
On his hesitation about the film: “I thought we should’ve just done a couple more seasons, and I didn’t see a reason to do a film, to be honest.”
On Arthur’s legacy: “I mean, it’s such a powerful thing to do. It’s something you don’t see on TV… Everyone thought, well, everyone knows Arthur’s gonna die. I was quite surprised, I was quite nasty sometimes, I weren’t very nice to people in it. But people loved me.”
Anderson’s reflection is telling. He recognizes the power of an end that subverts expectation and grants Arthur a final, infamous place in the saga. His comment about being “nasty” but being loved speaks to Arthur’s chaotic, compelling energy—a force that the series could not sustain indefinitely but whose absence leaves a permanent void.
The Fan Perspective: Grief, Anger, and “What If” Theories
The fan reaction has been a storm of grief and debate. Online communities are processing a dual loss: the character himself and the heroism of his memory. For years, fans speculated Arthur might retire, find peace, or die honorably in a final stand. The confirmation that Tommy—the brother he would have died for—murdered him is a brutal inversion.
This has fueled a wave of fan theories seeking an alternate truth. Some point to Tommy’s unreliable narration and alcoholism, suggesting the memory is a self-flagellating hallucination. Others analyze the flashback’s ambiguity, wondering if a struggle for the gun truly justifies a murder charge in Tommy’s mind. The most prevalent theory posits that the “accident” version was the real event, and Tommy’s confessional to Ada is a cruel, drunk fantasy—a deeper psychological punishment he inflicts on himself because he couldn’t accept an accidental killing of his brother.
These theories, while compelling, are challenged by the film’s presentation. The deliberate strangulation is shown as fact within the narrative’s logic. The tragedy is that Tommy, the ultimate unreliable narrator in his own guilt, may be telling the absolute truth, making the Shelby family’s foundation literally built on a patricide he concealed.
Why This Changes the Entire Series’ Legacy
This revelation is not a minor plot point; it is the key to Tommy Shelby’s final state. The film depicts Tommy as a haunted, isolated figure, his empire secure but his soul obliterated. Arthur’s death is the unhealable wound. Every calculated risk Tommy ever took for “family” is now underscored by the ultimate betrayal of that very ideal. It retroactively explains Arthur’s increasing volatility in later seasons—a subconscious awareness of his brother’s simmering resentment?
Furthermore, it cements the series’ thesis: the cost of power is the destruction of the very people you claim to protect. Peaky Blinders was never a simple gangster glorification. It was a Greek tragedy in Birmingham. Arthur Shelby Jr. was its most potent casualty, not in a blaze of glory, but in a moment of poisoned intimacy that doomed the man who survived him.
Where to Watch and What’s Next
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man is streaming exclusively on Netflix[3]. The film serves as both an epilogue to the series and a standalone tragedy, its central mystery a dark mirror held up to the Shelby legend.
With this truth established, the Shelby story may be complete. The罪 (sin) that Arthur’s death represents cannot be atoned for, only carried. Tommy’s journey ends not with a bang, but with the silent, permanent weight of having killed the brother he loved—and the understanding that the “family” he built was, in a moment of rage, the very thing he destroyed.
For fans still parsing every line and look, this is the final, terrible piece of the puzzle. Arthur Shelby did not die a soldier of the family. He was assassinated by it.
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