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Final Trailer
Trailer

Official Trailer
Trailer

Allison Williams and Violet McGraw Talk M3GAN’s Best Features & More - What's Poppin
Featurette

Own or Rent Today
Teaser

"I Nearly Had My Head Ripped Off"
Clip

Behind-the-Scenes Sustainability
Behind the Scenes

Evolution Of M3GAN Featurette
Behind the Scenes

M3GAN Takes Flight
Clip

Four Letterboxd Favorites with M3GAN
Featurette

M3GAN vs AMELIA
Clip

A Look Inside Featurette
Behind the Scenes

Gemma Finds M3GAN In Her House
Clip

An Unexpected New Bombshell Enters the Villa - Love Island USA
Featurette

M3GAN 2.0 IS...
Featurette

Killer Robot
Teaser

Monsters Makers
Featurette

Clapham Stunt
Featurette

Only in Theaters June 27
Teaser

Official Teaser
Teaser
Social
C
A review by CinemaSerf
6.0
Written on July 3, 2025
Is it really only two years since we first met M3GAN? Shouldn’t she have an ‘h’ in her name? Maybe I’m thinking of another robotic and plastic manifestation of womanhood? Anyway, this sees “Gemma” (Allison Williams) and her pals caught up with investment problems whilst Uncle Sam’s latest AI specimen “Amelia” (Ivanna Sakhno) goes off the rails. Pretty swiftly, thanks to the intervention of the newly mobile tech gazillionaire “Alt” (Jermaine Clement), she finds herself working on something she’d vowed never to touch again, else niece “Cady” (Violet McGraw) is gonna be toast. Luckily, she can count on the help of the benevolent “Christian” (Aristotle Athari) and a supply of kit that could build a space shuttle from scratch. Of course we, watching, all know this is bound to be but a cunning ploy by the demonic robot to reincarnate and cause havoc, and so down the predictably latex brick road we go. Now it’s not actually that much worse than the first film. There are some pithy lines contained amidst the endless dialogue and there are even a few laughs to be had as the acrobatics see furniture trashed and limbs torn asunder with the reliability of a “John Wick” film. The acting is all pretty feeble but I did quite enjoy the messy savagery of the denouement even if it is very nearly smothered in a syrupy gloop of disappointing sentiment and by the time it was all over, I was surprised that I didn’t hate it. I want one of those tellytubby robots to go with my remote-controlled Dalek, too.

































































