Christian Wolff applies his brilliant mind and illegal methods to reconstruct the unsolved puzzle of a Treasury chief's murder.Christian Wolff applies his brilliant mind and illegal methods to reconstruct the unsolved puzzle of a Treasury chief's murder.Christian Wolff applies his brilliant mind and illegal methods to reconstruct the unsolved puzzle of a Treasury chief's murder.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Alison Wright
- Justine
- (voice)
Fernando Chien
- Sorkis
- (as Fernando Funan Chien)
How Well Do Ben and Jon Know Each Other?
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn February 2020, Ben Affleck revealed there were talks about a follow-up to The Accountant (2016), but they had yet to nail down a script. At the same time, he also mentioned there were talks of developing a TV series based on the film.
- GoofsAs the film ends, the brothers drive off with the Airstream in tow, yet in the previous scene, the Ford F150 had just been destroyed in the desert shoot out.
- ConnectionsFollows The Accountant (2016)
- SoundtracksSee-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
Featured review
Greetings again from the darkness. As disappointing as most sequels are, there is a glimmer of hope when the original creative team and key cast members return. Such is the case with this sequel to the 2016 film, THE ACCOUNTANT (yes, it's been nearly a decade). Director Gavin O'Connor and writer Bill Dubuque are back, and both have skins on the wall. O'Connor also directed MIRACLE (2004) and the criminally underrated WARRIOR (2011), while Dubuque was the creator of the hit series "Ozark".
Two-time Oscar winner Ben Affleck returns as the brilliant and autistic accountant known as Christian Wolff (as well as a few other names). In what may be the least amount of screen time ever afforded a previous Oscar winner, JK Simmons' Ray King - former director of FinCEN is assassinated, and his former protégé MaryBeth Medina (a returning Cynthia Asdai-Robinson) tracks down Christian to help solve the case. But, of course, things are never that easy, and they also find themselves knee deep in another case - one that hits mighty close to real world headlines with human trafficking and gang activity.
Christian contacts his lethal-weapon brother ... yep, for the first time since the end of the first film ... and Braxton (Jon Bernthal) reluctantly agrees to join the hunt. The two brothers interact in a manner we're familiar with from all the 'mismatched buddy films' over the years, and Affleck and especially Bernthal excel at this, although it's impossible not to note Affleck's too-frequent smirks this time around. An early speed-dating sequence feels totally forced and out-of-place, and one can only assume it's included for anyone who didn't watch the first movie (which I highly recommend prior to viewing this one).
As good as the brother banter plays, the mish-mashed stories, lack of central villain, and over abundance of action sequences, turn this into a film trying too hard to please all audiences. Toss in extended segments featuring the autistic techno geniuses at Harbor Neuroscience Academy, and a description of Acquired Savant Syndrome, and the best advice is to just sit back and watch after turning off your own plot-solving brain cells. Christian has developed and funded the group of young geniuses at the Academy, and they are led by non-verbal Justine (played by Allison Robertson, and computer-voiced by Alison Wright of "The Americans"). The missing persons case centers around highly-trained assassin Anais (Daniella Pineda from the Jurassic World franchise), and we can't help but think she could hold her own as a story and character.
The abundance of comedic elements might surprise fans of the first film, as might the war zone style shootout during the film's climax and the overly-animated Affleck - all extremes when compared to the original, yet Affleck and Bernthal make the brotherly thing work Opens in theaters on April 25, 2025.
Two-time Oscar winner Ben Affleck returns as the brilliant and autistic accountant known as Christian Wolff (as well as a few other names). In what may be the least amount of screen time ever afforded a previous Oscar winner, JK Simmons' Ray King - former director of FinCEN is assassinated, and his former protégé MaryBeth Medina (a returning Cynthia Asdai-Robinson) tracks down Christian to help solve the case. But, of course, things are never that easy, and they also find themselves knee deep in another case - one that hits mighty close to real world headlines with human trafficking and gang activity.
Christian contacts his lethal-weapon brother ... yep, for the first time since the end of the first film ... and Braxton (Jon Bernthal) reluctantly agrees to join the hunt. The two brothers interact in a manner we're familiar with from all the 'mismatched buddy films' over the years, and Affleck and especially Bernthal excel at this, although it's impossible not to note Affleck's too-frequent smirks this time around. An early speed-dating sequence feels totally forced and out-of-place, and one can only assume it's included for anyone who didn't watch the first movie (which I highly recommend prior to viewing this one).
As good as the brother banter plays, the mish-mashed stories, lack of central villain, and over abundance of action sequences, turn this into a film trying too hard to please all audiences. Toss in extended segments featuring the autistic techno geniuses at Harbor Neuroscience Academy, and a description of Acquired Savant Syndrome, and the best advice is to just sit back and watch after turning off your own plot-solving brain cells. Christian has developed and funded the group of young geniuses at the Academy, and they are led by non-verbal Justine (played by Allison Robertson, and computer-voiced by Alison Wright of "The Americans"). The missing persons case centers around highly-trained assassin Anais (Daniella Pineda from the Jurassic World franchise), and we can't help but think she could hold her own as a story and character.
The abundance of comedic elements might surprise fans of the first film, as might the war zone style shootout during the film's climax and the overly-animated Affleck - all extremes when compared to the original, yet Affleck and Bernthal make the brotherly thing work Opens in theaters on April 25, 2025.
- ferguson-6
- Apr 23, 2025
- Permalink
- How long is The Accountant 2?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $80,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $26,206,776
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $24,533,959
- Apr 27, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $39,406,776
- Runtime2 hours 12 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
