BOYKA VS. DWAYNE JOHNSON

BOYKA VS. DWAYNE JOHNSON (2026) — First Trailer | Starring: Scott Adkins, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.
BOYKA VS. DWAYNE JOHNSON (2026) — The First Trailer is not just a “dream clash” between two action icons, but a violent manifesto about human limits, beliefs, ego, and the price a warrior pays when forced to emerge from the darkness he has buried himself in.
After years in seclusion, Yuri Boyka – “Most Complete Fighter in the World” – is no longer the bloodthirsty beast of the underground arenas. He lives quietly, isolated from the world, carrying scars not only on his skin but also in his soul. Boyka believes he has paid enough for the past, that violence is just a memory. But the world will not allow him peace. When Dante “The Colossus” Reyes appears, everything Boyka tried to protect is crushed in an instant.
Dante is not simply an opponent. He is the embodiment of pure power, of humanized modern warfare. A high-tech mercenary commander who believes absolute power is the only truth. No martial philosophy, no honor, no limits. Dante marches through a hail of bullets like an unstoppable machine, destroying everything in his path. When he flattens Boyka’s last remaining “sanctuary,” it’s not just a challenge – it’s a verdict.

The trailer opens with rapid, frantic cuts, like the heartbeat of an awakened warrior. Boyka delivers a 720-kick through a rain-soaked alley, the movement so precise it’s almost surreal. It’s not a display of technique – it’s a reminder that this body was born to fight. Immediately contrasting is the image of Dante crushing a concrete pillar with his bare hands, his eyes cold and emotionless. One side is the perfection of movement. The other is raw, unadorned power.
The chase on the roof of a speeding train is one of the most breathtaking moments. Boyka glides through the air using parkour, each landing precisely calculated. Behind him, Dante pursues in a black armored vehicle, as if the whole world is being forced to choose sides. Here, the film isn’t just about who’s faster or stronger – it’s about who can adapt to survive.
The greatest strength of BOYKA VS. DWAYNE JOHNSON lies in its ideological contrast. Boyka fights for redemption. Every blow he delivers is a control, an effort to prevent the demon within from escaping. Dante, on the other hand, believes in destruction. “I don’t just win… I erase.” – that chilling line isn’t just directed at Boyka, but at everything Boyka represents: discipline, honor, limits.

The climax is the final battle in a cage suspended over the mouth of a volcano. There’s nowhere to run. No allies. Only two people and their true nature remain. Here, Boyka’s speed clashes head-on with Dante’s overwhelming weight. Every punch, every kick feels like a “one-inch mistake is death.” The iron cage shakes, the glowing red lava below reminding us this isn’t just a fight – it’s the boundary between existence and annihilation.
The final moment of the trailer is quiet. The two warriors stand breathless, blood mingling with sweat. Boyka spits blood, a faint smile on his face – the smile of someone who accepts their fate, but never surrenders. Dante’s eyes narrow. Then the screen goes black. A punch rings out, dry, ruthless. Without seeing the result, the audience can feel its weight.

BOYKA VS. DWAYNE JOHNSON (2026) promises to be a fierce clash between two schools of action: Scott Adkins’ sophisticated martial arts and Dwayne Johnson’s unmistakable blockbuster charisma. But more than just Expendables-style hype, the film aspires to tell a story about human limits – where Precision confronts Power, where faith is tested, and where only one can emerge from the cage as a survivor. This isn’t just a fight. This is a battle that redefines what a “warrior” is in modern action cinema.