When the mission goes sideways, survival becomes personal.

One minute, he’s guarding a journalist on foreign soil. Next, he’s running for his life through the jungle as a coup unfolds around him. Freelance throws John Cena into one of his most unpredictable roles yet: a retired special forces operative turned reluctant bodyguard on a job that’s anything but routine.
Mason Pettits (John Cena) thought he’d left the battlefield behind. After years of military service and a disappointing desk job, he’s lured back into action by a seemingly simple assignment: protect disgraced journalist Claire Wellington (Alison Brie) as she interviews the controversial dictator of Paldonia, Juan Venegas (Juan Pablo Raba).
What starts as a controlled PR stunt quickly detonates into chaos when they are ambushed by a violent military coup, forcing Mason, Claire, and the dictator himself to flee into the jungle with no backup, no communication, and no idea who to trust.
As bullets fly and allegiances shift, Mason’s discipline clashes with Claire’s determination to get her story and redeem her reputation. Meanwhile, Venegas, ever the wildcard, adds to the tension with his disarming charm and questionable motives. What emerges is a fast-paced, tongue-in-cheek action thriller that mixes chaos with comedy.
Directed by Pierre Morel (Taken, Peppermint), Freelance balances high-speed action with unexpected humor. Morel, who’s no stranger to reinventing the modern action hero, praised Cena’s ability to balance intensity with levity: “He’s proven that before, that he has the sense of humor and timing, which is spot on,” said Morel in an interview. “In comedy, it’s all about the timing. But what the actors feel, you cannot direct that somehow. But it’s definitely in John.”
In a separate conversation with Yahoo! Entertainment, Morel expanded on Cena’s versatility and emotional depth: “We see, yes, it’s fun during the movie, but the beginning and the end, you show that fragility and that journey in his life when he comes from that very frustrated and unhappy professionally place and, in his family, finding purpose and finding peace — regathering with his family. So he pulled all three elements of that: the physique, the action, the comedic aspect, and the sensibility and the fragility of his character is very interesting. Very few actors can do all three.”
Locked, loaded, and full of surprises, Freelance delivers the kind of chaos only John Cena can handle.
Freelance starts streaming exclusively on Lionsgate Play beginning November 7, 2025.

