7.4

Bob Odenkirk’s Deadly Dad Remains a Delight in Nobody 2

Bob Odenkirk’s Deadly Dad Remains a Delight in Nobody 2
Introducing Endless Mode: A New Games & Anime Site from Paste

In a Summer movie season where the usual crop of sequels, rebirths and reduxes occupy our screens, there’s a specific kind of nostalgia that Timo Tjahjanto’s Nobody 2 manages to evoke. Beyond the brutal violence and clever quips there’s a specific call-back to a type of film that flourished in the decades past, one that recognized fully that the specific joy of watching people get punched in the face doesn’t need to be wrapped in a dour or overly complex narrative.

Nobody 2 picks up soon after the last film, where the daily grind of suburban life of a former government killer is getting to our protagonist. We see Bob Odenkirk’s Hutch Mansell rising early to greet the day in his quiet neighborhood. As the kids shuttle off to school, and his wife tries to secure sales as a real estate agent, Hutch is tasked with paying off debts incurred in the last chapter when he immolated a whole pile of cash, forced to retrieve certain items or conduct a given mission while murdering many along the way.

Unfortunately, all this work is putting a strain on his relationship, and although he does his best to come home to join his wife for a planned dinner, one can never fully anticipate a slew of machete-wielding Brazilians that complicate a given task. Recognizing that he needs a better work/life balance, Hutch plans a family trip to a vintage waterpark that he visited in his youth, trying in his own ways to craft good shared memories between him and his brood at a locale that was one of his few happy places from childhood.

Naturally, things go awry, and Hutch is sucked into circumstances where he is incapable of being chill. An almost innocent ruckus at the fairground soon leads to a far grander criminal enterprise. From here things escalate to almost apocalyptic levels as the small-scale theme park becomes the highly-foreshadowed setting for pure mayhem.

It’s in Odenkirk’s fine turn as the reluctant avenger that he evokes the work of a legendary performer from the past. In the 1980s, Bruce Willis rose to the top of the action-hero game by continually illustrating a reluctance to get into a fight. He cut a handsome, follicularly-challenged figure, forming a fit yet not steroid-inflated physique in contrast to several of his blockbuster colleagues, presenting himself as an everyman character who just wants to spend some time with his family but is forced to murder a slew of henchmen before returning home for dinner.

In ways both overt and subtle, Bob Odenkirk manages to channel this same kind of charisma. The star of Better Call Saul and Mr. Show was never top-of-mind for his physical prowess, yet just like Willis, there’s a believability that when push comes to shove he’s a guy holding a lot of internal trauma who would get the job done when called to task.

Nobody 2 has plenty other welcome throwbacks to the films of decades past, from Back to the Future’s Christopher Lloyd as the goofy-yet-deadly father figure, Gladiator’s (and Rushmore’s!) Connie Neilson, the Wu-Tang Clan (and Ghost Dog stalwart) RZA, and the new addition of the ultimate ‘80s femme fatale, Sharon Stone, slicing up the scenery and her enemies with an unsettlingly gleeful grin on her face.

We even have a Hanks to sprinkle in, with the very capable Colin showing once again how he can evoke a dose of the on-screen chemistry that his dad helped develop while turning expectations on its head. He’s his own man, of course, but he looks enough like his beloved father to immediately elicit empathy, buttressed with the gift of slightly hardened features that make for a perfectly punchable face. This is a feature fans of his more round-faced father would never have stomached during his prime. While father settled into decades of leading man roles, Colin’s character actor charms make for extremely watchable portrayals, with the added benefit of a layer of believable sociopathy that’s a welcome aspect of his acting palate.

A similarly stalwart performance is found from John Ortiz, who over more than 100 films has decades of experience of making things just a bit better by his inclusion. Colin Salmon returns as Hutch’s handler, Gage Munroe returns as the son learning lessons of survival from his father, and Paisley Cadorath appears again as the precocious but underutilized daughter figure.

Director Timo Tjahjanto manages to sprinkle a dose of his finally honed genre film craft into what’s fundamentally a straightforward continuation of Ilya Naishuller’s competently directed prior film. Tjahjanto’s 2016 film Killers (co-helmed with fellow “Mo Brother” Kimo Stamboel) has plenty of amazing thrills, but its greatest strength is how well realized its baddies prove to be, making one actually care about more than simply waiting for the next moments of violence. Similarly, Timo’s solo effort The Night Comes for Us joyfully employs The Raid’s Iko Uwais and Joe Taslim in this complex yet rewarding triad tale.

So although much of Nobody 2 unfolds as expected, there are also flourishes of directorial fancy that provide more of a spark. The fights on the duck boats are beautifully savage, and an especially effective use of an anchor provides one of the film’s most satisfying moments of reveling in the physical mayhem. The shaky-cam and quick edits are never overwhelming or incoherent, and Tjahjanto’s gift is to always provide a clear sense of narrative in every fight moment.

Similarly, the conceit of both an abandoned waterpark and cabin-in-the-woods for a final act fits comfortably into Timo’s horror movie wheelhouse, and the playfulness in which the body count rises toward the end is indeed satisfying. The grand battle that includes innumerable masked baddies being mowed down its both ridiculous and enjoyable, even if the faceless slaughter does slightly undercut some of the power that the Straw Dogs/Home Alone/A-Team-like contraptions for violence can sometimes evoke.

The family drama even manages to eventually come to the fore, with Nielsen given a chance to shine in ways that the first film didn’t allow as effectively. The comparatively light use of both Lloyd and RZA is also welcome, with each sprinkled in for just long enough to never overstay their welcome. As for Stone, well, she seems to be having the time of her life, channeling everyone from Dennis Hopper in Blue Velvet to Robin Williams as Popeye, and the film is all the better for this ridiculously over-the-top take.

In the end, Nobody 2 delivers what it demands–a brisk, entertaining, violent bout of catharsis to warm any summer day spent in a cool theatre with a boisterous crowd. The joy of watching Odenkirk create chaos has not abated, and although there’s somewhat less in the way of surprise this time around about his capacities to hold his own physically, it’s still a lot of fun to experience. With producers such as John Wick’s David Lietch sprinkling in some of their magic, this is Tjahjanto’s chance to shine on a different stage, and although it’s not as if the model has been completely upended, there’s still enough playfulness and originality here to make this more than a by-the-numbers sequel.

Nobody really asked for the Nobody films, making their success that much more satisfying. As a sequel, the second succeeds well enough, providing an additional throwback to a different kind of nostalgic kick, a Chevy Chase-in-Vacation shtick but with assault rifles and katanas. Bloody, boisterous, and kind of bananas, Nobody 2 refuses to take itself too seriously, but nor does it get mired into “lore” or any other such narrative detritus. This is a fun film where you get to see Odenkirk punch people in the face, and during these challenging times, that is a blessing of sorts to soothe the souls of we tired masses just looking for a bit of on-screen cathartic carnage to break up our day.

Director: Timo Tjahjanto
Writer: Derek Kolstad, Aaron Rabin
Stars: Bob Odenkirk, Connie Nielsen, John Ortiz, RZA, Colin Hanks, Christopher Lloyd, Sharon Stone
Release date: Aug. 15, 2025


Jason Gorber is a Toronto based film Critic and Journalist, Editor-in-Chief at That Shelf, the movie critic for CBC’s Metro Morning, and others. He is a member of the Toronto Film Critics Association and voter for the Critics Choice Awards Association. He also knows for a fact that CASINO is Scorsese’s masterpiece, and has a cat named Zissou.

 
Join the discussion...