So, the other film I watched on a very busy Sunday was this gem, M3ghan 2.0. I have to be honest, I haven’t seen the original, but it looked like it would be worth watching. M3GAN 2.0 is a 2025 American science fiction action film written and directed by Gerard Johnstone from a story he co-wrote with Akela Cooper. A sequel to the 2022 film M3GAN and the second installment in the M3GAN franchise, the film stars Allison Williams, Violet McGraw, Ivanna Sakhno, and Jemaine Clement, with Amie Donald physically portraying M3GAN while Jenna Davis voices the character. Jason Blum and James Wan return as producers through their respective Blumhouse Productions and Atomic Monster.
What immediately stands out is how the film deals with its central ideas about artificial intelligence, control, and human dependence on technology. M3GAN is no longer just a creepy novelty; she’s a fully realized presence whose intelligence, adaptability, and unsettling logic drive the story forward. The screenplay smartly plays with shifting alliances and moral ambiguity, making the audience constantly reassess whether M3GAN is purely a villain—or something more complicated and unsettling than that.
U.S. Army colonel Sattler, head of a secret branch of the Pentagon specializing in new technologies, gives a demonstration of AMELIA,[a] an android designed for infiltration and assassination missions and built using technology copied from the original M3GAN. During her mission, however, AMELIA reveals to Sattler that she is self-aware and escapes from his control.
In a strange twist, M3ghan, who survived by making a backup in a smart home from the happenings of the first film. becomes the best hope of stopping her. This reminded me of the Terminator franchise and the idea that one could outgrow one’s original programming.
The performances remain a strong point. Allison Williams brings added emotional weight and maturity to her role, reflecting a character shaped by past trauma and hard-earned lessons. Violet McGraw continues to impress, grounding the story with genuine emotional stakes. And M3GAN herself—through a blend of physical performance, voice work, and effects—is sharper than ever: funny, menacing, and oddly charismatic in a way few horror icons manage.
Stylistically, M3GAN 2.0 is slick and energetic. The action sequences are confidently staged, the pacing rarely drags, and the film knows exactly when to lean into camp and when to pull back for tension. It embraces its identity unapologetically, delivering moments that are thrilling, darkly funny, and undeniably crowd-pleasing.
Four stars out of five from me.