Strangers is a straightforward action-thriller centered on a woman's revenge against her abusive husband, leading to a romance with a hitman and a vigilante killing spree, with twists revealing darker secrets. The storytelling remains firmly in traditional genre territory, focusing on psychological manipulation, madness, and crime without injecting contemporary social justice lectures, identity politics, or systemic critiques. Casting features established white actors like Sienna Guillory, Jamie Bamber, and notably conservative icon Jon Voight in a key role, with no race-swapping, gender alterations, or forced diversity that clashes with the narrative—supporting roles are organic to the crime-thriller setting. No creator interviews emphasize activism or inclusion mandates; director Tony Dean Smith and writer Steven Paul deliver a pulse-pounding plot praised in reviews for its non-politically correct edge, emotional depth on logic vs. emotion, and unpredictability. Reception is mixed (IMDb 4.2/10), with criticisms targeting acting and plot believability rather than ideology; one reviewer explicitly attributes the low score to the film's avoidance of political correctness, highlighting strong performances amid a lack of woke pandering. This purity of entertainment focus, unmarred by progressive intrusions, makes it a refreshing throwback thriller.