Ratings: 4.5/10
Runtime: 1h 35min
Genres: Action
Director: Trevor Calverley
Writer: Michael Frost Beckner, Crash Leyland, Sean Wathen
Cast: Tom Berenger, Josh Brener, Chad Michael Collins
Language: English
Sniper: No Nation opens on silence. Not peace tension stretched thin. Directed by Trevor Calverley, it drops you into dust and distance, where every breath matters. One shot can end everything. A lone marksman operates off-grid, cut loose from flags and orders. Meanwhile, the terrain burns under harsh light—sand, steel, and broken structures that offer no real cover. However, the real danger isn’t distance. It’s trust. And there isn’t much left. The camera locks in tight through scopes and shifting sightlines. You feel the weight of every decision. Moreover the sound design stays sharp wind cuts triggers click then silence hits harder than gunfire. Performances hold steady, controlled, barely cracking under pressure. Who do you fight for when there’s no nation behind you? The film keeps pushing that question. Instead of answers, it builds isolation. Therefore, each mission feels more personal, more dangerous. Some moments linger longer than needed—but the tension holds. Ultimately, it’s stripped-down, cold and uncomfortably focused no glory and no noise Just survival. Streaming now on Afdah tv, it leaves you watching the horizon, waiting for movement.