The Hindi film G20, an Action and Thriller, was helmed by director Patricia Riggen, with the screenplay crafted by Logan Miller and Noah Miller. Presented by MRC, Mad Chance, and JuVee, it was produced by Andrew Lazar, Viola Davis, and Julius Tennon. Released on OTT platforms on April 10, 2025, G20 runs for 1 hour and 48 minutes.
G20 Movie 2025 Overview

Movie Name | G20 2025 Movie |
Original Language | English |
Spoken Language | Hindi |
Release Date | 10 April 2025 |
Runtime | 1 hour and 48 minutes |
Country | United States |
Genres | Action Thriller |
Director | Patricia Riggen |
Producer | Andrew Lazar, Viola Davis, Julius Tennon |
G20 Movie 2025 Screenshot

आप जो भी चाहते है वह आपको टेलीग्राम पर मिलेगा जॉइन करें


G20 Movie 2025 Star Cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Viola Davis | President Danielle Sutton |
Antony Starr | Edward Rutledge (Mercenary Leader) |
Anthony Anderson | Derek Sutton (First Gentleman) |
Marsai Martin | Serena Sutton (President’s Daughter) |
Elizabeth Marvel | Joanna Worth (U.S. Secretary of State) |
Sabrina Impacciatore | Elena Romano (Italian Prime Minister) |
Angela Sarafyan | Quoll (Mercenary Operative) |
Christopher Farrar | Demetrius Sutton (President’s Son) |
John Hoogenakker | Agent Darden (Secret Service Agent) |
Conrad Kemp | Bousquet (French Diplomat) |
Joseph Steven Yang | Lee Young-Ho (South Korean Diplomat) |
G20 Movie 2025 Trailer
G20 Movie 2025 Review
President Sutton, a decorated war hero, balances family tensions with her daughter Serena (Marsai Martin) and husband Derek (Anthony Anderson) while attending the G20 summit to propose a digital currency initiative for sub-Saharan farmers. Terrorists, led by Rutledge and armed with a $70 million cryptocurrency wallet, hijack the summit, deploying deepfake technology to destabilize global markets. Sutton uses her combat skills to protect her family, allied leaders, and the world economy, uncovering betrayals in the process.
G20 tackles modern issues like cryptocurrency, deepfake technology, and global economic volatility but does so with heavy-handed dialogue and shallow exploration. Its portrayal of a Black female president facing overt prejudice is ambitious but clumsily executed, with antagonists’ misogynistic taunts feeling cartoonish. The film’s U.S.-centric heroism, released post-2025 political shifts, feels like a relic of 1990s action cinema.
Compared to Air Force One or White House Down, G20 lacks the charisma and polish of its predecessors. While Davis’s performance echoes her commanding role in The Woman King, the film itself feels like a lesser vehicle for her talents, more akin to a streaming-era Has Fallen sequel.