Nobody 2
Nobody 2 is exactly the film its trailer promises and nothing more: 89 minutes of Bob Odenkirk getting beaten up, beaten down, and beating back.…
Full analysis belowNOT A WOKE TRAP. Nobody 2 markets itself as an R-rated action sequel about a family man with a violent past. That is exactly what it delivers. Sharon Stone's villain Lendina does physically overpower Hutch briefly in the climax, which some conservative critics flagged as forced girl-boss energy, but this is a visible third-act beat in a movie that otherwise centers a male protagonist protecting his family. There is no bait-and-switch. The film's trailers featured Stone prominently as the antagonist. Audiences know what they are getting.
Nobody 2 is exactly the film its trailer promises and nothing more: 89 minutes of Bob Odenkirk getting beaten up, beaten down, and beating back. The sequel to the 2021 sleeper hit drops Hutch Mansell and his family into a small-town Wisconsin vacation that predictably goes sideways when he crosses a corrupt sheriff (Colin Hanks), a desperate theme park owner (John Ortiz), and a glamorous crime boss named Lendina (Sharon Stone). Timo Tjahjanto, the Indonesian director making his English-language debut, brings his trademark visceral action choreography. The result is a competent, entertaining action sequel that conservative audiences can watch without ambush, though a few moments near the climax will raise eyebrows.
The core narrative is refreshingly traditional. Hutch Mansell is a husband and father trying to leave his violent past behind for one family vacation. He cannot. When an amusement park employee slaps his young daughter Sammy on the back of the head, Hutch's carefully maintained composure shatters and he beats the staff senseless. This protective-father impulse drives the entire plot. Hutch is not fighting for an abstract cause or a political ideal. He is fighting because someone touched his kid.
The family dynamics are the film's strongest traditional element. Hutch's relationship with his wife Becca (Connie Nielsen) is a genuine partnership. She is angry that he keeps breaking his promises to stay out of trouble, but she never abandons him. When he asks if she is leaving, she tells him plainly: 'I'm not going anywhere. Fix it.' That is a marriage, not a power struggle. When Becca ultimately saves Hutch by tranquilizing Lendina with a dart to the eye, it plays as a wife backing up her husband, not as a girl-boss upstaging the male lead.
Hutch's father David (Christopher Lloyd, age 87) gets a moment of glory when he recovers from being knocked unconscious and detonates the amusement park, killing Lendina and her remaining men. This is a multi-generational family fighting together. Father, son, adopted brother (RZA), and wife all contribute. The teenage son Brady even reconciles with the bully Max, and the two boys become allies. These are traditional story beats: family loyalty, intergenerational bonds, and masculine protection of the vulnerable.
The film's one genuinely concerning element, from a culture war perspective, is the handling of Sharon Stone's Lendina. She is the main villain, which is fine. Female villains are not inherently woke. The problem is a specific sequence at the climax where Lendina physically attacks Hutch and, for a brief moment, overpowers him. Hutch has spent the entire film dispatching dozens of armed men, trained killers, and a small army of henchmen. Yet two of Lendina's female lieutenants and then Lendina herself manage to get the better of him before Becca intervenes. Some conservative critics have flagged this as forced girl-boss energy that breaks the film's internal logic. They have a point, but the moment is brief, and Hutch is already badly wounded from 30 minutes of continuous fighting. It reads more like sloppy writing than ideological messaging.
Timo Tjahjanto's direction is the film's technical highlight. Coming from Indonesian action cinema (The Night Comes for Us, Headshot), he brings a raw, kinetic energy to the fight sequences that distinguishes Nobody 2 from the more stylized John Wick choreography. The fights feel painful and chaotic. Hutch loses part of his pinky finger. He gets battered, slashed, and beaten in ways that emphasize vulnerability rather than invincibility. This is traditionally masculine filmmaking: violence has consequences, toughness means enduring pain, and victory requires sacrifice.
The film underperformed at the box office, grossing $41 million worldwide against a $25 million budget. It opened third behind holdovers Weapons and Freakier Friday. However, its arrival on Netflix on March 14, 2026 (the day before the Oscars) is expected to give it significant streaming traction.
Bottom line: Nobody 2 is a solid, unpretentious action sequel that celebrates fatherhood, family loyalty, and the willingness to fight for the people you love. It has minor girl-boss issues in its final act that keep it from a full TRADITIONAL verdict, but there is no ideological agenda driving this film. It is a movie about a dad who hits people, and it knows exactly what it is.
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Girl-boss villain physically overpowers male protagonist at climax | 3 | Low | Moderate | 4.2 |
| Wife saves husband in final confrontation | 2 | Moderate | Moderate | 2 |
| Male protagonist portrayed as unable to keep promises to his family | 2 | High | Moderate | 1.4 |
| Corrupt white male authority figures (sheriff, crime structure) | 1 | High | Low | 0.35 |
| Interracial adopted brother treated as equal family member | 1 | High | Low | 1.01 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 9.0 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Father as protector: entire plot driven by paternal protective instinct | 4 | High | High | 5.04 |
| Marriage depicted as enduring partnership despite extreme stress | 3 | High | High | 3.78 |
| Multi-generational family fights together as a unit | 3 | High | Moderate | 2.1 |
| Violence has real consequences and costs | 2 | High | Moderate | 1.4 |
| Small-town America depicted without coastal condescension | 2 | Moderate | Low | 1 |
| Reconciliation between boys replaces progressive conflict resolution | 1 | High | Low | 0.7 |
| Lean, efficient storytelling without political subplots | 2 | High | Moderate | 1.1 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 15.1 | |||
Score Margin: +6 TRAD
Director: Timo Tjahjanto
Apolitical genre craftsman. Indonesian horror and action specialist with no known public political activism. His work focuses on visceral, kinetic violence and technical filmmaking craft rather than social messaging.Indonesian filmmaker (b. 1980) known for extreme horror and action films including V/H/S/2, Killers, Headshot, The Night Comes for Us, and May the Devil Take You. Nobody 2 is his English-language debut. He was brought on after original director Kirill Sokolov had scheduling conflicts. Tjahjanto comes from the Indonesian exploitation cinema tradition, which prioritizes choreography, practical effects, and relentless pacing over narrative or political messaging. He has no significant public political profile.
Writer: Derek Kolstad & Aaron Rabin
Kolstad created the John Wick franchise, which established the modern template for mid-budget action films built around a single unstoppable protagonist. He wrote the original Nobody and co-wrote the sequel. Kolstad's work is character-driven action with minimal political messaging. Rabin contributed to the screenplay. Bob Odenkirk and Umair Aleem provided additional literary material (uncredited on screen).
Adult Viewer Insight
Nobody 2 is comfort food for action fans who miss the era when action movies were about tough guys protecting their families. Bob Odenkirk's Hutch Mansell is the anti-superhero: visibly aging, physically vulnerable, and motivated entirely by love for his wife and kids. The film's political subtext, to the extent one exists, is libertarian rather than progressive: a man wants to be left alone with his family and responds with overwhelming violence when the corrupt local power structure threatens them. The brief girl-boss moment at the climax is the only scene that feels ideologically motivated, and even that is debatable. Timo Tjahjanto's action direction is excellent and the 89-minute runtime is refreshingly lean. This is not a great film, but it is an honest one.
Parental Guidance
Rated R for strong bloody violence throughout, language, and brief drug material. The violence is frequent and graphic: gunfights, hand-to-hand combat, stabbings, a finger amputation, burns, explosions, and multiple on-screen deaths. Hutch is visibly injured and bleeds heavily throughout the second half. A character is tranquilized through the eye (played for dark comedy). An amusement park is destroyed in a massive explosion. Strong language throughout including frequent F-words. Brief references to drug trafficking. No sexual content. The violence level is comparable to John Wick but with a grittier, less stylized aesthetic. Not appropriate for children. Mature teenagers (16+) who are comfortable with R-rated action violence.
Find Nobody 2 on Amazon Prime Video, rent, or buy:
▶ Stream or Buy on AmazonAs an Amazon Associate, VirtueVigil earns from qualifying purchases.
Community Discussion 0
Subscribe to comment.
Join the VirtueVigil community to share your perspective on this review.