

If you enjoyed the high-stakes groundedness of the first Greenland, the sequel arrives on OTT platforms with a very different energy. While the original was a race against time, Greenland 2: Migration is a slow-burn survival odyssey. Directed once again by Ric Roman Waugh, it picks up five years after the Garrity family found safety in their bunker, forcing them back out into a world that is shattered, irradiated, and arguably more dangerous than the comet itself.
The story follows John (Gerard Butler), Allison (Morena Baccarin), and their now-teenage son Nathan (Roman Griffin Davis) as they trek across a decimated European landscape toward a rumored sanctuary in the south of France. Butler remains the ultimate "everyman" hero, trading his technical engineer hat for one of a weary protector. His performance is the anchor here, portraying a father who is physically and mentally exhausted by five years of underground living.
The film excels in world-building. The desolate, gray-toned vistas of a frozen Europe are visually striking and create a persistent sense of dread. However, the script by Mitchell LaFortune and Chris Sparling feels more like a series of loosely connected hurdles than a cohesive narrative. From rickety ladder bridges across the English Channel to random skirmishes with bandits, some sequences feel designed purely for artificial tension. There are also notable logic gaps, such as Nathan’s diabetes being largely sidelined, that might irritate fans of the first film’s meticulous attention to detail.
At 98 minutes, it’s a tight, fast-paced watch that never feels boring. It lacks the emotional punch and novelty of its predecessor, but as a "decent watch" for a quiet night in, it does the job. It’s a brawny, bleak, and occasionally corny survival flick that works best if you don’t overthink the science.