Review: NOBODY 2 is an Unhinged Action B-Movie Thrill Ride
Bob Odenkirk is back as Hutch Mansell in Nobody 2, and yes, he’s still wrecking fools with the kind of feral energy that makes you wince and laugh at the same time. This sequel doesn’t try to outsmart itself or change the formula, it just turns the dial further into chaos, blood, and dark comedy. If you liked the first film, you’re going to have a blast with this one.
Four years after Hutch tore through the Russian mob, he’s now paying off a $30 million debt to the same organization, one hit at a time. It’s a grind, and it’s taken a toll. His marriage with Connie Nielsen’s Becca is strained, his kids barely see him, and he's worn down from the constant killing.
So, naturally, the family decides to take a much-needed vacation to Wild Bill’s Majestic Midway and Waterpark, an old haunt from Hutch's childhood with his brother, played again by RZA.
Of course, Hutch can't even take a break without chaos erupting. A run-in with some local thugs in the town of Plummerville turns things sideways, and the Mansell family ends up in the sights of a local crime ring run by a flamboyant theme park mogul (John Ortiz), a shady sheriff (Colin Hanks), and the most cartoonishly brutal villain Hutch has faced yet, played by Sharon Stone.
And here's where the movie stumbles. Stone's performance is... a lot. It's the kind of over-the-top villainy that feels out of sync with the rest of the cast. Everyone else plays it just grounded enough to sell the heightened world, but Stone goes full cartoon-style savage villain, but not in a good way.
I don’t understand why she played the character the way she did. Some people might enjoy it, but for me, it was too much, to annoying, and very strange.
That said, when the fists and bullets start flying, Nobody 2 goes all in. Director Timo Tjahjanto (The Night Comes for Us) knows his way around wild, gruesome action, and he lets Odenkirk off the chain. The movie leans into the absurdity of Hutch being both a loving dad and a cold-blooded killer, sometimes in the same breath. I loved how the movie went full on Looney Tunes-style mayhem, with it’s bonkers and explosive action.
There’s a stronger emotional undercurrent this time, especially with Becca. Nielsen gets more to do, and her arc adds some much-needed grounding to all the chaos. Meanwhile, Christopher Lloyd returns as Hutch's trigger-happy dad, stealing scenes with that same gleeful bloodlust he brought to the original.
Nobody 2 isn’t trying to reinvent anything. It knows what it is: a gritty, funny, occasionally unhinged B-movie thrill ride. It doesn’t care about universe-building or lore.
It just wants to give you 90 minutes of inventive, face-pummeling fun,and with Odenkirk fully owning this role, it delivers exactly that.