★★★★☆ (4/5) Rating for Filmyfly.Com: Zero stars. Avoid. Have you seen Boss Level? Share your favorite death scene in the comments (legally, of course).
But Boss Level (2020) is not your philosophical indie drama. It’s an 100-minute adrenaline shot directed by Joe Carnahan ( The Grey , Smokin’ Aces ). Roy must survive an unrelenting gauntlet of assassins, sword-wielding samurai, helicopter gunships, and his own mounting frustration—all while trying to solve the mystery of the loop and save his estranged wife (Naomi Watts) and son. For years, Frank Grillo was Hollywood’s go-to "tough guy in the background" (Crossbones in the MCU, The Purge: Anarchy ). Boss Level finally hands him the megaphone. Boss Level -2020- Filmyfly.Com
The film’s greatest trick is making repetition feel fresh. Each death teaches Roy (and the audience) something new. By the third act, you’re almost predicting the attacks alongside him. It’s a video game logic brought to life—think Edge of Tomorrow meets an 80s arcade brawler. This brings us to the elephant in the room: Filmyfly.Com . ★★★★☆ (4/5) Rating for Filmyfly
Grillo brings a weary, sarcastic charm to Roy. After dying hundreds (possibly thousands) of times, he’s memorized every bullet, every car crash, every explosion. He delivers exposition while dodging decapitation. He quips while bleeding out. It’s a performance that balances action-hero bravado with genuine pathos—especially in quieter moments where Roy visits his son for the "first" time, knowing he’ll have to relive the goodbye tomorrow. Share your favorite death scene in the comments
Disclaimer: This article discusses the film "Boss Level" for educational and critical purposes. It does not endorse or promote piracy. Filmyfly.Com is known for hosting unauthorized, copyrighted content. We strongly advise readers to watch "Boss Level" legally on platforms like Hulu, Disney+, or Prime Video to support filmmakers. The Premise: Groundhog Day with Grenades Imagine dying every single day. Not metaphorically—but brutally, graphically, and in increasingly creative ways. That’s the reality for Roy Pulver (Frank Grillo), a retired Delta Force operative trapped in a time loop that resets every morning at the exact moment he wakes up.
But watching it on Filmyfly.Com? That’s a death loop you don’t want to enter. Pay for the film, or stream it legally. Your device security—and your conscience—will thank you.