Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueChristian 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.
- Réalisation
- Scénariste
- Vedettes
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 5 nominations au total
Fernando Chien
- Sorkis
- (as Fernando Funan Chien)
6,6116.6K
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Avis en vedette
Bernthal Steals the Show
The Accountant 2 doubles down on the action and humor over the first film. It does however try to juggle too many subplots that are poorly connected, leading to a less coherent film and a lack of a singular, hateable villain.
On the plus side, making Jon Bernthal a co-lead this time was incredibly smart. He and Affleck have great chemistry and Bernthal's Braxton is both a lethal threat and downright hilarious. This is easily his best role since The Punisher.
Like the first film, action isn't the primary focus, with a lot of time spent on enjoyable character moments. But when the action does arrive, it really delivers. Depending on what the new Mission: Impossible has in store for us, the Juarez shootout in this film may go down as the best action sequence of the year.
Again, I wish more of the character development had been focused on the villains, so we'd have a central antagonist who seems like a real threat. Instead we get several boring micro-villains.
I also wish the writing and editing were working in better harmony to bring us a more coherent story.
But all that said, Affleck and Bernthal have charm to spare, the final act is awesome, and this is a decent follow up to the admittedly better first film. 7/10.
On the plus side, making Jon Bernthal a co-lead this time was incredibly smart. He and Affleck have great chemistry and Bernthal's Braxton is both a lethal threat and downright hilarious. This is easily his best role since The Punisher.
Like the first film, action isn't the primary focus, with a lot of time spent on enjoyable character moments. But when the action does arrive, it really delivers. Depending on what the new Mission: Impossible has in store for us, the Juarez shootout in this film may go down as the best action sequence of the year.
Again, I wish more of the character development had been focused on the villains, so we'd have a central antagonist who seems like a real threat. Instead we get several boring micro-villains.
I also wish the writing and editing were working in better harmony to bring us a more coherent story.
But all that said, Affleck and Bernthal have charm to spare, the final act is awesome, and this is a decent follow up to the admittedly better first film. 7/10.
Did I Miss Something?
It's been years since I watched "THE ACCOUNTANT" and I didn't watch it before going to see this one. I liked this movie and enjoyed it, but I felt like it was missing something. What that is, I don't know, I can't put my finger on it. Maybe I missed something. And whatever that something might have been, I think the movie could have been better.
I liked the dance scene, not so much the troupe that followed. The movie had a hero's heart and some great action. A solid matinee movie.
When the day comes when it goes to streaming, I'll be sure to watch the both movies back to back. Hopefully, I'll discover that missing ingredient.
I liked the dance scene, not so much the troupe that followed. The movie had a hero's heart and some great action. A solid matinee movie.
When the day comes when it goes to streaming, I'll be sure to watch the both movies back to back. Hopefully, I'll discover that missing ingredient.
From Sharp Thriller to Hollow Self-Parody
The Accountant 2 had the potential to build on the strong foundation laid by its predecessor - a serious, well-crafted action thriller with genuine emotional stakes. Instead, it sadly veers into self-parody. What was once a grounded character study wrapped in a taut narrative is now reduced to a series of exaggerated callbacks and hollow action beats.
Rather than deepening the complexity of its central character, the sequel leans into caricature, treating its own mythology with a wink rather than with the conviction that made the original resonate. It's disappointing to see a film that once took itself - and its audience - seriously lose its focus in favor of easy spectacle. I was hopeful for a thoughtful continuation; what we got instead feels like a reflection of its former self, more imitation than evolution.
Rather than deepening the complexity of its central character, the sequel leans into caricature, treating its own mythology with a wink rather than with the conviction that made the original resonate. It's disappointing to see a film that once took itself - and its audience - seriously lose its focus in favor of easy spectacle. I was hopeful for a thoughtful continuation; what we got instead feels like a reflection of its former self, more imitation than evolution.
Cosplay of the original movie
This was cute buddy shooting movie. This was not a sequel of the original Accountant movie. All of the characters acted completely different than they did in the original movie. Did someone tell Ben he didn't "act" enough in the first movie? I thought his portrayal of a neural divergent person was refreshing in the 1st movie. I don't know what "voice" or speech pattern he was trying to achieve with the sequel but it was off putting and didn't feel genuine. I loved that in the first movie the "computerized voice" was his childhood friend. Now it's a team of Xavier School for Gifted Youngsters (X-men/X-mansion)-like group of kids? I think this movie would have done better as a completely separate standalone movie. Just call it something else and add some of the backstory we got in the original. There was no "Accounting" done at all. And there was barely any action in this sequel at all. I don't know. It just didn't really work for me.
Nothing like the original
Tonally extremely different to the original movie as they aim to increase the comedic moments. Very weak plot which seemed to rely on paper thin character links.
Terrible oversights with character continuity for the actual accountant. He sounded and looked different - his wardrobe was actually that of Forrest Gump and they even mentioned that as a reference at one point. He doesn't seem to be working in the same way now, and just messing about with dating algorithms for laughs now?! Even if you buy into him making 9 years of effort to integrate, it just seemed too different and ultimately fans of the first movie are coming back for more of the same so development must be within some bounds, otherwise he is just a different character.
I was really upset that they turned his "Solomon Grundy" stim/soothe into a joke and then had him use it in absolutely the wrong moment - more like a punch/tag line. His father's routine over overstimulation that dominated the original to help him cope with the world was completely absent - nothing really seemed to trigger him this time at all.
Would go so far as to say that Jon Bernthal was absolutely wasted and his character was made to look like an idiot rather than a dangerous and whimsical guy.
Agent Medina was a bit of an afterthought who got in the way. Little character development and it seemed like she was just there to remind us all how "off book" the accountant and his brother are.
Honestly this was a terrible follow up to the first movie and we came home and immediately put on the original to try and wash away the mess that was this sequel. It was such an opportunity to really do something cool with the concept, and it was absolutely wasted.
Terrible oversights with character continuity for the actual accountant. He sounded and looked different - his wardrobe was actually that of Forrest Gump and they even mentioned that as a reference at one point. He doesn't seem to be working in the same way now, and just messing about with dating algorithms for laughs now?! Even if you buy into him making 9 years of effort to integrate, it just seemed too different and ultimately fans of the first movie are coming back for more of the same so development must be within some bounds, otherwise he is just a different character.
I was really upset that they turned his "Solomon Grundy" stim/soothe into a joke and then had him use it in absolutely the wrong moment - more like a punch/tag line. His father's routine over overstimulation that dominated the original to help him cope with the world was completely absent - nothing really seemed to trigger him this time at all.
Would go so far as to say that Jon Bernthal was absolutely wasted and his character was made to look like an idiot rather than a dangerous and whimsical guy.
Agent Medina was a bit of an afterthought who got in the way. Little character development and it seemed like she was just there to remind us all how "off book" the accountant and his brother are.
Honestly this was a terrible follow up to the first movie and we came home and immediately put on the original to try and wash away the mess that was this sequel. It was such an opportunity to really do something cool with the concept, and it was absolutely wasted.
Blocage sonore
Prévisualisez la bande originale ici et continuez à écouter sur Amazon Music.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAllison Robertson replaced Alison Wright from Le comptable (2016) as Justine, but Wright still provides the computer-generated voice of the non-verbal character.
- GaffesWhen the hackers gain access to the selfie lady's computer, they have no reason to distract her. With anything close to the level of access they have at that point they would just copy the files out. Taking over her desktop is completely pointless.
- Citations
Christian Wolff: The fall didn't kill him. It was the abrupt stop.
- ConnexionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Must Watch: Best of April 2025 (2025)
- Bandes originalesSee-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
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- How long is The Accountant 2?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Accountant 2
- Lieux de tournage
- Cowboy Palace Saloon - 21635 Devonshire St, Chatsworth, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Honky Tonk bar scene.)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 80 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 65 523 366 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 24 533 959 $ US
- 27 avr. 2025
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 103 223 366 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 12m(132 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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