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Nobody 2 (2025)

Nobody 2 (2025)

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My quick rating – 6.4/10. The first Nobody worked because Hutch Mansell (Bob Odenkirk) felt like a vulnerable Everyman, a middle-aged dad who could snap at any moment but was still grounded enough that we bought into the fantasy. Nobody 2 takes a different approach: it strips away the vulnerability and turns Hutch into an indestructible, payback-hungry machine. Whether that’s an upgrade or a downgrade depends entirely on how much you enjoy watching an older father beat the smugness out of anyone dumb enough to cross him. Spoiler: it’s still bizarrely satisfying.

The film opens with Hutch in an interrogation room, dog loyally by his side. It’s clearly a setup that we’ll return to later, and it establishes right away that this sequel isn’t pretending to reinvent the wheel. Instead, it’s doubling down on what worked the first time: stripped-down plotting and bone-crunching fight sequences.

This time, Hutch decides to take his family on a nostalgic vacation to a small-town theme park. Unfortunately for them, the park is run by a corrupt operator, guarded by a crooked sheriff, and tied to a ruthless crime boss. The setup is simple—overly simple, really—but that’s by design. The writer seems intent on proving that you don’t need espionage or convoluted twists to keep an audience engaged. They’re right. At only ninety minutes, the film flies by, paced with surprising efficiency.

Still, the stripped-down story comes with a cost. The mysterious, anti-hero aura that made Hutch such a compelling figure the first time around is gone. He’s no longer a man reluctantly dragged into chaos; he’s actively seeking it, handing out punishment for even the smallest offenses. That shift makes him less sympathetic and more of a one-man wrecking crew. The film leans into that shift unapologetically, making it feel closer to a ’90s action-comedy than a gritty revenge tale.

Where the film stumbles is with its villain. Casting Sharon Stone as Lendina, a matriarch described as the “eat her own children” type, sounds promising on paper. Fun? Slightly. Intimidating? Not even close. But she only gets one scene to prove her ruthlessness, and it falls flat. It feels like she borrowed her performance from Richard E. Grant’s cartoonishly weird villain in Hudson Hawk (don’t believe the hype, that is an underrated gem).

But let’s be honest: nobody is here for the villain. We’re here to see Bob Odenkirk, an older father who now fights like he’s auditioning for the senior Olympics in bone-snapping. The fights are the movie’s bread and butter—well-paced, brutal, and creative enough that you’ll never look at a Tilt-a-Whirl the same way again. Watching Hutch turn innocent amusement rides into elaborate death traps is exactly the kind of “dad power fantasy” cinema you didn’t know you wanted until you saw it.

Nobody 2 (2025) #jackmeatsflix
Nobody 2 (2025)

In the end, Nobody 2 knows exactly what it is. The plot is thinner than cotton candy, the villains are undercooked, and the mystique of the original is gone. But if all you want is ninety minutes of Odenkirk as the grumpiest PTA dad who ever lived, cracking skulls and running through inventive set pieces in a warped amusement park, this sequel delivers on that front.

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