A MASSIVE Luther spoiler has been revealed after Idris Elba was filmed filming in London for the new movie.
The iconic BBC series has been continued as a series of films of Netflix, the second of which is now shooting.

And there’s very good news for fans as actress Ruth Wilson has returned to the franchise for the first time in seven years.
Alice was seemingly killed off in the fifth series of the show when she fell to her death after forcing Luther to drop her from a great height.
However there was never any confirmation of her death and the character didn’t appear, nor was mentioned in the first Netflix film, The Fallen Sun.
So last year when actress Ruth Wilson was confirmed to be returning to Luther for the next film, fans were overjoyed.
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There was speculation that Alice would only appear via flashbacks having been seemingly killed off during the series.
However a new fan filmed video of the movie’s shoot in Canary Wharf suggests that she is very much alive.
The video shows Luther and Alice looking up into an office building before rushing off together.
The news will come as a huge relief for fans who utterly adore the psychopath and her murderous ways.
And further proof of the theory has been supplied by Luther creator Neil Cross.
He recently told Newsweek that Alice is definitely alive and well.
“As far as I’m concerned there isn’t a world where Ruth Wilson ever went away,” he said.
“Just because she’s not in this particular film doesn’t mean that she’s not there in the broader universe. Alice is a very real person to me and I wouldn’t want to live in a world without her.”
He added: “I would love to turn the tables at some point on a conversation like this because Alice sprung from some moist part of the back of my brain fully formed, in a slightly folkloric way.
“I didn’t make her up, it felt like she already existed. But, she is not a good person, and it interests me that people respond to her and like her, and—here’s the troubling bit— identify with her so profoundly.
“It’s an interesting thing, and when you’ve got a dynamic with the audience, a kind of conversation between character and audience which is that rich, we’d be fools not to want to explore that again, it’s fun.”