



Bullets fly, bones break, and property damage racks up at a rate to make any insurance adjuster weep — Nobody 2 wastes no time getting back to the business of inventive, brutal fun. The action is choreographed with gleeful precision, hitting those ’90s popcorn thrills where the hero dispatches bad guys with both flair and a smirk.
Bob Odenkirk still sells the everyman-turned-avenger act, grounding the chaos with just enough humanity to keep it from becoming pure cartoon. The set pieces are as outrageous as they are crowd-pleasing, and there’s an undeniable pleasure in watching a middle-aged dad outmatch trained killers.
Step outside the shootouts, though, and the film feels much lighter — the plot is barely there, the character beats perfunctory. It’s like the filmmakers knew the audience wasn’t here for nuance, only for the next creatively staged takedown. As a thrill ride, it works; as a story, it’s just along for the ride.