
This isn’t just another Jason Statham action movie—it’s pure chaotic entertainment injected straight into the veins of modern action cinema. And honestly? I thought the sequel idea sounded ridiculous… until the first major fight scene reminded me exactly why audiences love watching Statham break bad guys in increasingly absurd ways.

Then the bees showed up. And somehow, everything got even better.

A Spectacle Worth Watching on the Big Screen
The story picks up with Adam Clay trying to live quietly in the English countryside, tending actual beehives and staying far away from the violent world he left behind. But peace never lasts long in movies like this.

When elderly victims—including Clay’s kind-hearted landlady—get targeted by a massive phishing scam, the film shifts gears fast. What starts as digital fraud suddenly spirals into a brutal war between old-school justice and a billion-dollar tech empire.
And that’s where the movie gets weirdly brilliant.
Instead of turning Clay into another gadget-heavy super spy, the film leans hard into analog revenge. No fancy hacking montages. No AI nonsense saving the day. Just Jason Statham using farm tools, instinct, and literal bee swarms to dismantle a corrupt digital kingdom.
Yes. Literal bee swarms.
And somehow… it works.
The Scene That Stole the Show
There’s one infiltration sequence people are absolutely going to talk about online.
Clay enters a billionaire’s luxury gala wearing a full bee suit while casually carrying smoking equipment used for calming hives. At first, it feels almost comedic. The audience laughs. The guards underestimate him.
Big mistake.
Minutes later, the scene erupts into total mayhem.
Security drones crash into glass walls. Armed guards panic as bees flood the compound. Clay marches through the chaos like an unstoppable force of nature carrying farming equipment that suddenly becomes terrifying weapons.
It’s ridiculous. Completely over-the-top.
And honestly? That’s exactly why it’s fun.
Why This Sequel Works Better Than Expected
Jason Statham Understands The Assignment
Some actors try too hard to make absurd action concepts feel grounded. Statham does the opposite—he commits fully to the madness without ever winking at the camera.
That confidence keeps the movie alive.
Leaked set photos showing him actually tending beehives for preparation suddenly make perfect sense after watching the film. His performance feels oddly authentic even while the movie itself becomes increasingly unhinged.
The Action Feels Physical Again
One thing this sequel absolutely gets right is impact.
Fights are messy, loud, and satisfyingly practical. You feel every punch, every smashed table, every broken drone. In an era where many action films drown in CGI weightlessness, this movie remembers that audiences still love seeing real destruction.
Especially when it involves a sledgehammer meeting a billionaire’s laptop.
That moment got applause in my screening.
The Anti-Tech Angle Hits Surprisingly Hard
Underneath the chaos, there’s actually a pretty sharp theme running through the story.
The movie taps directly into modern fears about scams, digital fraud, corporate greed, and vulnerable people getting exploited online every single day. That emotional hook gives the action more weight than expected.
It’s not subtle. Not even close.
But it works because the anger feels real.
What Holds It Back
Not everything lands perfectly.
The movie definitely pushes believability past its breaking point multiple times, especially during the final assault sequence. Some viewers are absolutely going to roll their eyes at how invincible Clay becomes.
The villains also lean a little too cartoonish at times. The tech billionaire antagonist feels less like a real person and more like every internet nightmare mashed together into one smug character.
But honestly, subtlety was never the goal here.
This movie knows exactly what it is.
And it commits hard.
But Here’s What Most People Missed…
Beneath all the explosions and bee-related insanity, the sequel quietly doubles down on something audiences miss from older action films: simplicity.
One angry man.
One clear mission.
No complicated multiverse setups. No endless lore homework.
Just pure revenge-fueled momentum.
That simplicity makes the film weirdly refreshing.
And then… the final ten minutes happen.
Without spoiling anything, let’s just say the ending leaves the door very open for this franchise to become even crazier moving forward.
Which is both exciting and slightly terrifying.
What Viewers Are Saying
- Daniel Brooks: “Statham fighting tech billionaires with bees is the exact kind of chaos I needed.”
- Amanda Lewis: “I was laughing one second and cheering the next. Insanely entertaining.”
- Chris Monroe: “The bee swarm scene deserves to become an internet meme immediately.”
- Tyler Grant: “Way more fun than I expected. The action actually feels brutal again.”
- Sophia Bennett: “Ridiculous? Absolutely. Did I love every second? Also yes.”
- Marcus Hill: “This feels like old-school action cinema injected with modern internet rage.”
- Emily Carter: “The gala infiltration scene alone was worth the ticket price.”
- Ryan Foster: “I can’t believe they made bees terrifying.”
Final Verdict
This sequel probably shouldn’t work as well as it does.
On paper, it sounds absurd: a retired assassin-beekeeper taking down digital scammers using farm equipment and weaponized bee swarms. But thanks to Jason Statham’s commitment, satisfyingly brutal action, and a surprisingly relatable anti-scam premise, the film transforms into one of those rare action movies that audiences will genuinely have fun watching together.
It’s loud. Silly. Violent. Weirdly cathartic.
And sometimes, that’s exactly what blockbuster cinema should be.
Final Score: 7.4/10
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this sequel better than the first movie?
For pure entertainment value, many viewers will probably say yes. It’s bigger, crazier, and far less restrained.
Do I need to watch the previous film first?
It helps, but the movie explains enough about Adam Clay’s past for newcomers to jump in without feeling lost.
Are the action scenes actually good?
Absolutely. The film delivers brutal hand-to-hand combat mixed with wildly creative action setups.
Is the bee concept taken seriously?
Surprisingly… yes. And that commitment is exactly why the movie works.
Is this worth watching in theaters?
If you enjoy crowd-pleasing action movies with loud reactions and over-the-top moments, this is definitely a theater experience.