Season 3 Episode 1: Peaky Blinders :

Under orders from Winston Churchill, Tommy is brokering an arms deal for the Russian "Whites" (monarchists) to fight the Bolsheviks.

The episode introduces a complex geopolitical layer that elevates the stakes from local gang warfare to international intrigue. Peaky Blinders : Season 3 Episode 1

Tommy’s desperate plea to his family—"No cocaine, no sport... and the main thing is, no fighting"—is undercut within minutes by his own violence against a servant and the brutal murder occurring in the cellar. International Espionage: The Russian Plot Under orders from Winston Churchill, Tommy is brokering

The tension peaks with the arrival of Anton Kaledin, a Soviet spy posing as a contact. When he provides the wrong code name ("Constantine"), Tommy orders his execution. and the main thing is, no fighting"—is undercut

Set in 1924 after a two-year time jump, the episode centers on Tommy Shelby’s wedding to Grace Burgess. The setting—the lavish Arrow House in Warwickshire—is a visual metaphor for Tommy’s transition into high society. However, the premiere immediately deconstructs this veneer of respectability.

The Season 3 premiere of Peaky Blinders serves as a masterclass in narrative transition, shifting the Shelby family from the "razor-sharp" gutters of Small Heath to the opulent, yet equally lethal, corridors of the British aristocracy.

The murder falls to Arthur, whose struggle with a "God-fearing" new wife, Linda, and his own damaged psyche provides the episode's emotional core. Visual Symbolism and Cinematography