After a great catastrophe, the souls of Nezha and Aobing are saved, but their bodies face ruin. To give them new life, Taiyi Zhenren turns to the mystical seven-colored lotus in a daring bid... Read allAfter a great catastrophe, the souls of Nezha and Aobing are saved, but their bodies face ruin. To give them new life, Taiyi Zhenren turns to the mystical seven-colored lotus in a daring bid to rebuild them and change their fate.After a great catastrophe, the souls of Nezha and Aobing are saved, but their bodies face ruin. To give them new life, Taiyi Zhenren turns to the mystical seven-colored lotus in a daring bid to rebuild them and change their fate.
- Awards
- 6 wins & 1 nomination total
Aidyn Ahn
- Shen Xiaobao
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Aidyn James Ahn)
Eric Bauza
- Rat Second-In Command
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Robert Clotworthy
- Wuliang Xianwong
- (English version)
- (voice)
Ell
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (voice)
Richard Epcar
- Shen Zhengdao
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Damien C. Haas
- Deero
- (English version)
- (voice)
Aaron LaPlante
- Rat Boss
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Crystal Lee
- Ne Zha
- (English version)
- (voice)
Candi Milo
- Lady Shi Ji
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Summary
Reviewers say 'Ne Zha 2' is acclaimed for its stunning animation and modern take on Chinese mythology. Breathtaking visuals, intricate details, and fluid action sequences are highlighted. Themes of identity, destiny, and self-discovery resonate deeply, with emotional depth and familial bonds emphasized. The film's cultural richness and innovative storytelling appeal globally. However, some note pacing, character development, and narrative coherence issues. Overall, it's a significant achievement in Chinese animation.
Featured reviews
Ladies and gentlemen, allow me to introduce you to China's new all-time cinematic box office champion (top 10 worldwide as I write) with a staggering $1.6 billion generated mostly from Chinese theaters within a span of 17 days and still rising as it reaches international audiences, Ne Zha 2. As overhyped as I was before watching the movie due to the milestone it signifies, I was still pleasantly not disappointed.
My biggest complaint it that the film gives too much of everything: too much comedy, too much suspense, and too much action that we rarely have time for substantive emotional development. Besides that, the movie is a roller coaster of heightened emotion that free falls nonstop through toe-clenching fight sequences, mesmerizing world building, and countless intricate and diversely driven characters. Individualistic heroism proves very much futile in this society of hidden rules and unspoken bigotry, as every being lives to avenge their own justice. Thus the world of Ne Zha is horrifyingly realistic and incredibly engaging.
The aesthetics of the film also stands apart, taking modern adaptations of classical characters, designs, costumes, settings, and stories overall. Fusion of kung-fu and naturalistic sceneries with anime-like choreographs and cinematic shots makes the combat sequences truly blood-boiling. Based on videos I watched analyzing the movie's artistry, the amount of attention to detail the production gives in portraying the traditional artifacts, needlework, and weaponeering is impeccable.
Overall, Ne Zha 2 represents more than an outstanding animation and more than an industrial miracle.
My biggest complaint it that the film gives too much of everything: too much comedy, too much suspense, and too much action that we rarely have time for substantive emotional development. Besides that, the movie is a roller coaster of heightened emotion that free falls nonstop through toe-clenching fight sequences, mesmerizing world building, and countless intricate and diversely driven characters. Individualistic heroism proves very much futile in this society of hidden rules and unspoken bigotry, as every being lives to avenge their own justice. Thus the world of Ne Zha is horrifyingly realistic and incredibly engaging.
The aesthetics of the film also stands apart, taking modern adaptations of classical characters, designs, costumes, settings, and stories overall. Fusion of kung-fu and naturalistic sceneries with anime-like choreographs and cinematic shots makes the combat sequences truly blood-boiling. Based on videos I watched analyzing the movie's artistry, the amount of attention to detail the production gives in portraying the traditional artifacts, needlework, and weaponeering is impeccable.
Overall, Ne Zha 2 represents more than an outstanding animation and more than an industrial miracle.
As the most anticipated animated blockbuster of 2025, Ne Zha 2 has grossed more than $2.2 billion since its release in China earlier this year, ranking as the fifth-highest-grossing film in global box office history. Yet its English-language version, which opened in North America last Friday (August 22), failed to sustain that momentum. Despite a robust promotional push by A24, a voice cast led by Michelle Yeoh, and a wide rollout across 2,228 theaters (including IMAX), the film earned only $1.5 million in its first three days-placing 13th at the box office. By contrast, Netflix's KPop Demon Hunters, opening the very next day in just 1,700 theaters, pulled in $18 million.
When news first broke that Ne Zha 2 would premiere in the U. S., some outlets heralded it as a "litmus test" of American audiences' appetite for Chinese storytelling. In retrospect, the results are sobering. The film's performance underscores a persistent reality: the more deeply a work is rooted in Chinese cultural elements, the harder it becomes for it to cross over in the U. S. market. Recent Chinese stage productions and cinematic blockbusters have encountered similar challenges on American soil.
Unlike the familiar narrative templates of Disney or Pixar, Ne Zha 2 leans heavily into its "mythic Chinese texture." It picks up directly from the 2019 original, with characters drawn from the 16th-century novel Investiture of the Gods and centuries of folk mythology. There is little handholding for new or unfamiliar audiences-the film plunges straight into large-scale battles. For Chinese viewers, this continuity feels seamless; for American audiences without prior knowledge, it can be alienating.
At 150 minutes, the film is epic in scope and brimming with spectacle, but its length far exceeds the typical attention span of children and, arguably, adults conditioned by TikTok. At the same time, its mix of emotional beats, slapstick humor, and shonen-style battles places it closer to Japanese anime such as Naruto or Dragon Ball Z than to Hollywood's family-oriented animated features. To viewers raised on Pixar's emotional formula or Disney's fairy-tale adventures, Ne Zha 2 comes across as "too complex" while still "not fairy-tale enough." Even a star-studded English dub cannot erase this cultural divide.
The film's rapid pacing compounds the issue. After only a brief recap, it drops viewers directly into its fantastical reimagining of ancient China, with the resurrected spirits of Ne Zha and Ao Bing immediately swept into massive battles. For those unfamiliar with the original film or the mythological references, it can feel overwhelming and disorienting.
Still, the weak North American box office should not be mistaken for a dismissal of the film's artistic or cultural value. Rather, it highlights a deeper challenge for Chinese cinema: the true barrier to "going global" is not quality, but whether its cultural language can be understood and embraced across borders.
The chilly reception to Ne Zha 2 in the U. S. points to a crucial question: how can Chinese films remain true to their cultural roots while also building more effective bridges for cross-cultural communication? The key may not lie in dubbing or casting international stars, but in finding universal emotions and narrative frameworks that resonate beyond cultural boundaries.
Of course, like Ne Zha 2 and several other record-breaking Chinese productions, these films remain enormous successes at home. The rise of large domestic studios has enabled blockbusters such as Hi, Mom and Wolf Warrior 2 to gross hundreds of millions-almost entirely from Chinese audiences. For many filmmakers and investors, overseas box office now seems increasingly secondary, if not altogether irrelevant.
When news first broke that Ne Zha 2 would premiere in the U. S., some outlets heralded it as a "litmus test" of American audiences' appetite for Chinese storytelling. In retrospect, the results are sobering. The film's performance underscores a persistent reality: the more deeply a work is rooted in Chinese cultural elements, the harder it becomes for it to cross over in the U. S. market. Recent Chinese stage productions and cinematic blockbusters have encountered similar challenges on American soil.
Unlike the familiar narrative templates of Disney or Pixar, Ne Zha 2 leans heavily into its "mythic Chinese texture." It picks up directly from the 2019 original, with characters drawn from the 16th-century novel Investiture of the Gods and centuries of folk mythology. There is little handholding for new or unfamiliar audiences-the film plunges straight into large-scale battles. For Chinese viewers, this continuity feels seamless; for American audiences without prior knowledge, it can be alienating.
At 150 minutes, the film is epic in scope and brimming with spectacle, but its length far exceeds the typical attention span of children and, arguably, adults conditioned by TikTok. At the same time, its mix of emotional beats, slapstick humor, and shonen-style battles places it closer to Japanese anime such as Naruto or Dragon Ball Z than to Hollywood's family-oriented animated features. To viewers raised on Pixar's emotional formula or Disney's fairy-tale adventures, Ne Zha 2 comes across as "too complex" while still "not fairy-tale enough." Even a star-studded English dub cannot erase this cultural divide.
The film's rapid pacing compounds the issue. After only a brief recap, it drops viewers directly into its fantastical reimagining of ancient China, with the resurrected spirits of Ne Zha and Ao Bing immediately swept into massive battles. For those unfamiliar with the original film or the mythological references, it can feel overwhelming and disorienting.
Still, the weak North American box office should not be mistaken for a dismissal of the film's artistic or cultural value. Rather, it highlights a deeper challenge for Chinese cinema: the true barrier to "going global" is not quality, but whether its cultural language can be understood and embraced across borders.
The chilly reception to Ne Zha 2 in the U. S. points to a crucial question: how can Chinese films remain true to their cultural roots while also building more effective bridges for cross-cultural communication? The key may not lie in dubbing or casting international stars, but in finding universal emotions and narrative frameworks that resonate beyond cultural boundaries.
Of course, like Ne Zha 2 and several other record-breaking Chinese productions, these films remain enormous successes at home. The rise of large domestic studios has enabled blockbusters such as Hi, Mom and Wolf Warrior 2 to gross hundreds of millions-almost entirely from Chinese audiences. For many filmmakers and investors, overseas box office now seems increasingly secondary, if not altogether irrelevant.
Just came back from AMC. The movie was awesome. Loved everything, the fighting, the visual, the plot and the funny scenes. Most importantly, loved the key message the movie is trying to deliver - good or bad (immortal vs demon) is not defined by the establishment. You define yourself and control your own destiny,never surrender to the oppression of the establishment.
Just came back from AMC. The movie was awesome. Loved everything, the fighting, the visual, the plot and the funny scenes. Most importantly, loved the key message the movie is trying to deliver - good or bad (immortal vs demon) is not defined by the establishment. You define yourself and control your own destiny,never surrender to the oppression of the establishment.
Just came back from AMC. The movie was awesome. Loved everything, the fighting, the visual, the plot and the funny scenes. Most importantly, loved the key message the movie is trying to deliver - good or bad (immortal vs demon) is not defined by the establishment. You define yourself and control your own destiny,never surrender to the oppression of the establishment.
We had a very genuine and relatable reaction to *Ne Zha 2*! The film, with its depiction of the friendship between Ao Bing and Ne Zha, as well as the emotional family relationships, especially the moments between Ne Zha and his mother, is truly heartwarming. The scene of the mother's passing is especially powerful, and it's easy to see how it can stir emotions.
Although the lengthy ads at the beginning were a bit annoying, the depth of the story and emotions in the film definitely made it worthwhile. The movie showcases themes of growth, transformation, and the pursuit of justice, with a conclusion that feels both uplifting and heartwarming.
It's a great choice for families with kids-children can learn a lot about friendship, family, and growing up from this film. Even without kids, adults can still find a lot of emotional resonance and reflection in the movie. Overall, *Ne Zha 2* is definitely worth watching, whether you're accompanying children or enjoying it on your own.
Although the lengthy ads at the beginning were a bit annoying, the depth of the story and emotions in the film definitely made it worthwhile. The movie showcases themes of growth, transformation, and the pursuit of justice, with a conclusion that feels both uplifting and heartwarming.
It's a great choice for families with kids-children can learn a lot about friendship, family, and growing up from this film. Even without kids, adults can still find a lot of emotional resonance and reflection in the movie. Overall, *Ne Zha 2* is definitely worth watching, whether you're accompanying children or enjoying it on your own.
I think one reason why this movie is getting so popular is that many people will find their own reflection in the characters and story. Be it parent-and-child relationship, friendship, stereotype about others, others prejudice on yourself, and the perception of the world that was shaped by mass and social media.
I enjoyed the whole 2.5 hours duration, with laughter, excitement and tears. To fully appreciate the story, it will be even better if you watch Nezha 1 beforehand to learn more about the background of this ancient Chinese myth. In no doubt one of my favourite and a highly recommended movie. Cannot ask for more!
I enjoyed the whole 2.5 hours duration, with laughter, excitement and tears. To fully appreciate the story, it will be even better if you watch Nezha 1 beforehand to learn more about the background of this ancient Chinese myth. In no doubt one of my favourite and a highly recommended movie. Cannot ask for more!
Did you know
- TriviaNe Zha 2 became the highest-grossing Chinese and non-English film of all time (surpassing La bataille du lac Changjin (2021)). It also became the highest-grossing film of all time in a single market (surpassing Star Wars : Épisode VII - Le Réveil de la Force (2015)) and became the first non-Hollywood production to join the billion dollar club (57th overall).
- ConnectionsFeatured in SBS World News: Episode dated 16 February 2025 (2025)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Na Tra 2: Ma Đồng Náo Hải
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $80,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $23,322,209
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,687,776
- Feb 16, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $2,150,000,000
- Runtime
- 2h 24m(144 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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