Skip to main content
Cleaner backdrop
Cleaner poster

Cleaner

“The stakes are a thousand feet high.”

6.3
2025
1h 37m
ActionThriller
Director: Martin Campbell

Overview

When a group of radical activists take over an energy company's annual gala, seizing 300 hostages, an ex-soldier turned window cleaner suspended 50 storeys up on the outside of the building must save those trapped inside, including her older brother.

Trailer

Greenband Online Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
The Vertigo of Routine

If cinema has taught us anything about skyscrapers, it is that they are rarely just buildings; they are monuments to hubris waiting to be shattered. In *Cleaner*, veteran director Martin Campbell returns to this architectural precipice, not with the suave espionage of *Casino Royale* but with the grimy, tactile desperation of a working-class thriller. While the film struggles to escape the gravitational pull of its obvious influences—namely the *Die Hard* template—it manages to find a pulse in the spaces between the glass, largely thanks to a director who understands that action is meaningless without geography.

Daisy Ridley hanging from a skyscraper window washer cradle

The premise is deceptively simple, almost aggressively retro. Joey Locke (Daisy Ridley), an ex-soldier scrubbing the windows of London’s corporate elite, finds herself suspended outside the gala of an energy conglomerate when radical eco-activists seize the building. It is a setup that screams 1990s video store rental, yet Campbell shoots it with a muscular clarity that is increasingly rare in our era of digital sludge.

The film’s visual language is defined by the terrifying transparency of the glass. Campbell and cinematographer Eigil Bryld utilize the window washer’s cradle not just as a prop, but as a stage. The camera lingers on the fraying cables and the dizzying drop, creating a sense of vertigo that feels practical and earned. Unlike the weightless CGI battles of modern superhero fare, *Cleaner* insists on gravity. When Joey swings from a facade, you feel the physics of her body slamming against the steel; the violence here is bruising and exhausted, mirroring the protagonist’s station in life. She is on the outside looking in—quite literally—invisible to the wealthy patrons until she becomes their only hope.

Daisy Ridley looking intense and dirty in a vent or tight space

However, the narrative scaffolding is less sturdy than the building itself. The script attempts to weave in contemporary anxieties about climate change, with Clive Owen delivering a sermonizing turn as the activist leader Marcus. But the film suffers from a moral confusion, unsure whether to treat these antagonists as villains or prophets, eventually settling for a muddled middle ground. The emotional core is meant to be Joey’s relationship with her neurodivergent brother, trapped inside. While Ridley approaches the role with a ferocious, sweaty stoicism that recalls Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley, the writing often reduces her brother to a plot device—a "key" to unlock doors rather than a fully realized human being.

Despite these script limitations, *Cleaner* succeeds as a kinetic exercise. There is a specific sequence involving a shattered window and a fire hose that reminds us why Campbell is a master of spatial awareness. He maps out the action so we always know exactly where Joey is in relation to the threat. It is "meat-and-potatoes" filmmaking, yes, but prepared by a chef who respects the ingredients.

Clive Owen holding a gun in a suit

Ultimately, *Cleaner* is a film about labor. It juxtaposes the invisible toil of the service worker against the performative ethics of the corporate class. It doesn't quite transcend its genre trappings to become a classic, but it possesses a grit and competence that commands respect. In an industry obsessed with expanding universes, there is something refreshing about a movie that just wants to survive the night, hanging by a thread, fifty stories up.
LN
Latest Netflix

Discover the latest movies and series available on Netflix. Updated daily with trending content.

About

  • AI Policy
  • This is a fan-made discovery platform.
  • Netflix is a registered trademark of Netflix, Inc.

© 2026 Latest Netflix. All rights reserved.