Olympus Has Fallen May 2026
Olympus Has Fallen shines in its stripped-down efficiency. Once the terrorists secure the bunker and take the President hostage to execute a live-streamed humiliation of the United States, the film becomes a claustrophobic cat-and-mouse game. Banning, the lone operative inside, sheds his suit and tie for tactical gear, becoming a ghost in the marble halls.
The film wastes no time establishing its emotional stakes. We meet Mike Banning (Gerard Butler), a rugged Secret Service agent assigned to the Presidential detail. After a tragic accident leaves the First Lady dead during a mission gone wrong, a guilt-ridden Banning is reassigned to a desk job at the Treasury Department. Olympus Has Fallen
The action is visceral and punishing. Fuqua’s camera doesn’t flinch; heads are bashed against desks, throats are slit with shards of glass, and gunfights are deafeningly loud. It’s a throwback to Die Hard in the most literal sense—a single, resourceful protagonist picking off villains floor by floor while trading terse, one-liner-adjacent dialogue over a secure comm link. Olympus Has Fallen shines in its stripped-down efficiency


