Two years after M3GAN, a marvel of artificial intelligence, went rogue and embarked on a murderous rampage, its creator, Gemma, has become an advocate for government oversight of AI. Unbeknownst to her, a defense contractor has created a military-grade weapon known as Amelia, the ultimate infiltration spy. However, as Emlia's self-awareness increases, it becomes less interested in taking orders. Hoping to stop Emilia, Gemma decides to resurrect M3GAN, making it faster, stronger, and more lethal.
Director: Gerard Johnstone
Cast: Allison Williams, Violet McGraw, Amie Donald, Jenna Davis, Ivanna Sakhno, Aristotle Athari, Timm Sharp, Jemaine Clement
Release Date: June 27, 2025
Genre: Action, Horror, Sci-Fi, Thriller
Rated PG-13 for strong violent content, bloody images, some strong language, sexual material, and brief drug references.
Runtime: 1h 59m
Review:
M3GAN 2.0 switches up the horror tone of the original to a goofier, sci-fi slant that mines films like Terminator 2 among others which works more often than not if you go with the flow. Gerard Johnstone avoids making this series into a Chucky clone by going in a different direction which is sure to turn off some people, but he manages the change in tone and genre with impressive ease. The film has a breezy feel to it that makes it easy to enjoy even though its story is more than a tad nonsensical. He's clearly comfortable leaning into the sillier aspect of this particular story something he did with the original, albeit in a more restrained manner. The action is bigger and louder across the board with the climatic robot karate fight being chock full of B-movie cheese. The cast fully embraces it all and seems up for everything that Johnston throws at them. Allison Williams and Violet McGraw return from the first film as adoptive mother and daughter with McGraw being given more to do this go around. Williams is given much more latitude as the disgraced robot designer turned advocate for ethical usage of AI in this entry than her more reserved turn in the original. Violet McGraw also got so much to do here as a preteen with her character having turned into something of robotics prodigy in the intervening years. They both work well together as parent and siblings who have dealt with a bit more than the usual preteens. Brian Jordan Alvarez and Jen Van Epps both also return as Gemma's coworkers who have stuck with her for some reason all things consider but it does provide some comedy once M3GAN returns in earnest. Amie Donald and Jenna Davis are back providing the body and voice to a now slightly taller M3GAN that's explained away in a throwaway line of dialogue. Davis' voice work is hilariously sardonic here even as the titular robot experiences a bit of personal growth throughout the film from killer robot to more of a protector. Jemaine Clement has a fun but all too brief appearance as a tech billionaire in the mold of Elon Musk that leaves you wishing he'd gotten more screentime. Ivanna Sakhno is given the rather thankless role of AMELIA (Autonomous Military Engagement Logistics & Infiltration Android) who serves as M3GAN rival. While the majority of the returning cast is given so much more to do this go around, Sakhno isn't asked to do much outside of look robotic and make good use of her stunt fighting training. With the film clocking in at nearly 2 hours it would have been worthwhile to have given her something more interesting to do than what she's tasked with. M3GAN 2.0 has plenty of fat that could have been trimmed to make room for a bit more time with Sakhno's character but she's more than capable of giving off a murderous stare in this enjoyably comedic sci-fi romp.
B+
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