Christian Wolff usa la sua mente brillante e i suoi metodi illegali per mettere insieme il puzzle irrisolto dell'assassinio di un capo delle tasse.Christian Wolff usa la sua mente brillante e i suoi metodi illegali per mettere insieme il puzzle irrisolto dell'assassinio di un capo delle tasse.Christian Wolff usa la sua mente brillante e i suoi metodi illegali per mettere insieme il puzzle irrisolto dell'assassinio di un capo delle tasse.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 3 candidature totali
Fernando Chien
- Sorkis
- (as Fernando Funan Chien)
Recensioni in evidenza
The Accountant 2 opens with tired beats and immediately falls into formula. The writing is weak, loaded with bad cop movie tropes, flat exposition, and attempts at humor that land with a thud. Cynthia Addai-Robinson's performance is especially wooden-zero chemistry, no urgency, and completely lifeless delivery. The score sounds like stock suspense cues pulled from a bargain bin, draining scenes of any weight. Ben Affleck's portrayal of Christian feels like a caricature of a character, not a person. Jon Bernthal is the lone bright spot, managing to bring grit and humanity despite the clunky lines. Slick on the surface, hollow underneath. 4/10.
The Accountant 2 had the potential to build on the strong foundation laid by its predecessor - a serious, well-crafted action thriller with genuine emotional stakes. Instead, it sadly veers into self-parody. What was once a grounded character study wrapped in a taut narrative is now reduced to a series of exaggerated callbacks and hollow action beats.
Rather than deepening the complexity of its central character, the sequel leans into caricature, treating its own mythology with a wink rather than with the conviction that made the original resonate. It's disappointing to see a film that once took itself - and its audience - seriously lose its focus in favor of easy spectacle. I was hopeful for a thoughtful continuation; what we got instead feels like a reflection of its former self, more imitation than evolution.
Rather than deepening the complexity of its central character, the sequel leans into caricature, treating its own mythology with a wink rather than with the conviction that made the original resonate. It's disappointing to see a film that once took itself - and its audience - seriously lose its focus in favor of easy spectacle. I was hopeful for a thoughtful continuation; what we got instead feels like a reflection of its former self, more imitation than evolution.
Ben Affleck's portrayal of Christian Wolff in The Accountant 2 feels noticeably different this time around. His character's autism traits seem more exaggerated, which comes off as a disservice to the subtle brilliance of the original performance. The addition of more overt comic relief also feels jarring and out of place-it shifts the tone from the gritty, tightly wound thriller of the first film into something less focused. That said, there are a handful of scenes that are exceptionally well shot, with crisp choreography and dark, gritty visuals. Ultimately, the film struggles to balance its identity, wavering between serious character study and action-comedy hybrid. It's watchable, but not nearly as satisfying as the first.
7/10. The Accountant 2 serves as a worthy sequel. Leaning more into brotherly banter, tighter action, and plays into a lighter and humorous tone.
The plot and character arcs, much like the first, leave a lot to be desired. The story isn't as convoluted as the first but still gets murky. The villains are one dimensional, generic, and quite forgettable. Sadly, Anna Kendrick doesn't return.
The film heavily relies on bringing Jon Bernthal into a bigger role and it works. His strained relationship and funny lines with Affleck are the heart of the movie. Crazy stuff always happens when Bernthal and Affleck show up. Their actions scenes are fun to watch. They are brothers who are trying to get along and get past their messed up childhood trauma. This results in the humor being less dry; for better or worse.
Ben Affleck again does a splendid job in his role as a Aspergers man with his different tics and mannerisms. He is smart, nerdy, and a killing machine. Yes, the Hollywood portrayal of Asperger's is kind of cliché for the sake of the plot. Not all of us are genius computer hackers. Or killers for that matter. But the film did a respectable job with depicting the thinking, psyche, and social struggles on a personal level.
I think Ben got the weirdness down well by being around Matt Damon for too long. Haha, just kidding Matt, you're great. In the one trillion chance you read this, please don't be mad.
Thank you, Regal Cinemas, for showing this early on Tax Day. No, I didn't see this at a film festival but that would have been awesome. (Hint, hint). Ben Affleck awkwardly line dancing was very hilarious. Kudos to suggesting the band play a Metallica song.
The plot and character arcs, much like the first, leave a lot to be desired. The story isn't as convoluted as the first but still gets murky. The villains are one dimensional, generic, and quite forgettable. Sadly, Anna Kendrick doesn't return.
The film heavily relies on bringing Jon Bernthal into a bigger role and it works. His strained relationship and funny lines with Affleck are the heart of the movie. Crazy stuff always happens when Bernthal and Affleck show up. Their actions scenes are fun to watch. They are brothers who are trying to get along and get past their messed up childhood trauma. This results in the humor being less dry; for better or worse.
Ben Affleck again does a splendid job in his role as a Aspergers man with his different tics and mannerisms. He is smart, nerdy, and a killing machine. Yes, the Hollywood portrayal of Asperger's is kind of cliché for the sake of the plot. Not all of us are genius computer hackers. Or killers for that matter. But the film did a respectable job with depicting the thinking, psyche, and social struggles on a personal level.
I think Ben got the weirdness down well by being around Matt Damon for too long. Haha, just kidding Matt, you're great. In the one trillion chance you read this, please don't be mad.
Thank you, Regal Cinemas, for showing this early on Tax Day. No, I didn't see this at a film festival but that would have been awesome. (Hint, hint). Ben Affleck awkwardly line dancing was very hilarious. Kudos to suggesting the band play a Metallica song.
The Accountant, like pizza, is decent even when mediocre. Unfortunately, like most sequels, this doesn't measure up to the original. The story and characters are more bland and vague where they shouldn't be, and more detailed and defined where it doesn't really help. Frankly, it turned out more like a generic TV action movie. More of the same, but not as good. Bad guys get killed, but the reasons are far more generic and vague. The story and plausibility took a big hit. Not all the action sequences works as well as the last one. They tried to me more jokey here, but only about half land. But, given the sad state of movies these days, I don't mind supporting a "noble" effort.
Theatrical Releases You Can Stream or Rent
Theatrical Releases You Can Stream or Rent
These big screen releases can now be watched from the comfort of your couch.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAllison Robertson replaced Alison Wright from The Accountant (2016) as Justine, but Wright still provides the computer-generated voice of the non-verbal character.
- BlooperAt around 1:02, the hackers access Pamela's laptop looking for a particular photo. They display her photos on the laptop screen, risking being caught, and use the email software to send it, all unnecessarily. The photos can be found and downloaded by merely accessing the stored data, without alerting the user.
- Citazioni
Christian Wolff: The fall didn't kill him. It was the abrupt stop.
- ConnessioniFollows The Accountant (2016)
- Colonne sonoreSee-Line Woman
Written by George Bass and Nina Simone
Performed by Danielle Ponder and Bryce Dessner
Produced by Bryce Dessner
Courtesy of Saddest Factory Records
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- El contador 2
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Cowboy Palace Saloon - 21635 Devonshire St, Chatsworth, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Honky Tonk bar scene.)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 80.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 65.523.366 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 24.533.959 USD
- 27 apr 2025
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 103.223.366 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 12min(132 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1
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