logo
#

Latest news with #JennaDavis

What Happens During ‘M3GAN 2.0' End Credits And How Possible Is A Sequel?
What Happens During ‘M3GAN 2.0' End Credits And How Possible Is A Sequel?

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

What Happens During ‘M3GAN 2.0' End Credits And How Possible Is A Sequel?

"Megan 2.0" partial poster. M3GAN 2.0 — the sequel to the 2022 horror hit M3GAN — has footage in the end credits. What happens during the end credits and does it mean anything for another sequel? M3GAN 2.0 opens in theaters nationwide on Friday. The official summary for the film reads, 'Two years after M3GAN, a marvel of artificial intelligence, went rogue and embarked on a murderous (and impeccably choreographed) rampage and was subsequently destroyed, M3GAN's creator Gemma (Allison Williams) has become a high-profile author and advocate for government oversight of AI. "Meanwhile, Gemma's niece Cady (Violet McGraw), now 14, has become a teenager, rebelling against Gemma's overprotective rules. Unbeknownst to them, the underlying tech for M3GAN has been stolen and misused by a powerful defense contractor to create a military-grade weapon known as Amelia (Ivanna Sakhno), the ultimate killer infiltration spy. "But as Amelia's self-awareness increases, she becomes decidedly less interested in taking orders from humans. Or in keeping them around. With the future of human existence on the line, Gemma realizes that the only option is to resurrect M3GAN (Amie Donald, voiced by Jenna Davis) and give her a few upgrades, making her faster, stronger and more lethal. As their paths collide, the original AI icon is about to meet her match.' Directed by Gerard Johnstone, M3GAN 2.0 also stars Brian Jordan Alvarez, Jen Van Epps, Aristotle Athari, Timm Sharp and Jemaine Clement. Note: Spoilers about the ending and end credits are revealed in the next section. What Footage Is Featured During The End Credits Of M3GAN 2.0? End-credits or post-credits scenes generally wrap up loose ends from a scene from earlier in a film — like Brad Pitt's F1: The Movie does — or they can set up a potential sequel. In the case of M3GAN 2.0, there is no post-credits scene and the end credits only show highlights from 2022's M3GAN and the new film, along with a silhouette of M3GAN the AI robot dancing. As for the future of M3GAN the AI android, the sequel makes it clear that the program can function as a disembodied robot no matter how mangled its mechanic makeup gets. As such, there's really no reason to stay in your seats to watch the end credits because there's really no substance to them. Even though there are no scenes in 2.0 that set up another M3GAN (M3GAN 3.0, perhaps?), another movie in the series is in all likelihood something that Universal Pictures executives are considering. M3GAN was a big moneymaker for the studio in 2022 — it made $182 million worldwide against a $12 million budget before prints and advertising, according to The Hollywood Reporter, so they'll no doubt be tempted for a third film depending on how well M3GAN 2.0 does. M3GAN 2.0 is projected by Universal (via THR) to earn $20 million domestically in its opening weekend frame against a $15 million production budget before P&A, which is cheap by Hollywood standards for a major release (Deadline, however, reported that the budget was $25 million, which is still a low number). So, as long as Universal makes enough money to justify another M3GAN film, director Gerard Johnstone is game to make more. The director told THR recently that as AI technology continues to evolve, it will help foster future screen stories. 'I would not be surprised if there's another five of these movies, Johnstone told THR. 'So, who knows, maybe I'll come back for the fifth one.' Lucky for Johnstone, franchise star Allison Williams wants to see more M3GAN movies, too. "We have big aspirations of big dreams, and I certainly don't feel like I'm done making these movies with these people and this tonal landscape and the subject matter,' Williams told THR recently. 'So, yeah, I have been dreaming of a third, for sure.' M3GAN 2.0 opens in theaters nationwide on Friday.

M3gan 2.0 is a fun upgrade that's a little too self-aware
M3gan 2.0 is a fun upgrade that's a little too self-aware

The Verge

time19 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Verge

M3gan 2.0 is a fun upgrade that's a little too self-aware

Universal and Blumhouse's first M3gan feature came out of nowhere with a premise so ridiculous and campy that it was hard not to be at least a little intrigued. Equal parts Child's Play and Small Wonder, M3gan was undeniably silly with its story about an AI-powered doll who sang Sia's 'Titanium' and danced around as she chopped people's heads off. But the movie struck a near-perfect balance between straight horror and comedy that made it a delight to see in a crowded theater. M3gan also killed at the box office, to the tune of $180 million against a modest $12 million budget. That made it all too easy for Universal to greenlight and fast-track a bigger, more expensive sequel, but it was unclear where, exactly, the new franchise might go next. There's a pointed cleverness to the way returning director Gerard Johnstone and writer Akela Cooper evolve their murderous doll's story with M3gan 2.0. And you can see in the film's action-forward sci-fi turn how much more money was put into its production. Like many horror sequels, though, M3gan 2.0 has a tough time living up to its predecessor as it brings back the original cast to take on a few new AI threats. It's by no means a terrible movie, but it does get a bit too caught up trying to wax philosophic about the dangers of a robot uprising when it should be more focused on being a scary good time. Though most of the world has moved on two years after M3gan's (voiced by Jenna Davis, and physically portrayed by Amie Donald) first killing spree, memories of what happened still haunt teenager Cady (Violet McGraw) and her roboticist-turned-author aunt Gemma (Allison Williams). While Gemma's involvement in M3gan's creation tarnished her reputation as an inventor, she's become a well-known advocate for stronger controls on artificial intelligence. At Gemma's new foundation, her longtime friends Tess (Jen Van Epps) and Cole (Brian Jordan Alvarez) now work to develop different kinds of technologies, like powered exoskeletons that are meant to help humans stay competitive as simple, efficient robots become a larger part of the labor market. The last thing Gemma — who insists on minimal screen time in their new house — wants is for Cady to follow in her STEM footsteps. But Cady has a knack for programming things in her own right, and she's very good about keeping it all hidden. Like Gemma, Cady's still very traumatized by her last experience with M3gan. She knows how quickly M3gan's hard-coded imperative to love her can turn violent. Cady wouldn't dream of trying to bring M3gan, who was destroyed, back 'better.' But the same can't be said for certain people within the US military. Though most everyone remembers how much of a disaster M3gan was, technically speaking, the remote-controlled Autonomous Military Engagement Logistics and Infiltration Android known as 'Amelia' (Ivanna Sakhno) is a different kind of machine. Amelia's got all of her older sister's same bells, whistles, and killing skills, but none of M3gan's buggy, emotional code. Amelia seems like she's the next generation of unmanned warfare right up until the point when she goes rogue and starts murdering people her handlers don't mean for her to. Whereas the first M3gan was a fairly straightforward horror flick, 2.0 switches things up by leading with a strong sci-fi energy that feels like a cross between Terminator 2: Judgment Day and Alita: Battle Angel. Amelia isn't from the future, but she is very much a terminator who snaps necks and kicks people's jaws off with a cold brutality that feels more vicious than the first M3gan's kills. Despite their gore, Amelia's action sequences are delightfully electric and fun to watch as she sets off on a hunt to find innovators in the AI field. But they often lack a suspenseful quality because of how most of her victims don't have any reliable way of defending themselves. M3gan 2.0 seems to know that there's only so much killer-robot-on-human violence one can watch before the schtick gets a bit boring, and so it telegraphs Amelia and M3gan's showdown basically from the jump. Because the film has to bring M3gan back and can't rush headlong into the machines' confrontation, though, it spends a fair amount of its runtime trying to pad Gemma and Cady's arc out with milquetoast ideas about parenthood in the age of AI. Once M3gan's back and in an uneasy alliance with the humans, the story becomes heavy-handed in its messaging about the emotional rifts that technology can cause within family units. Those beats — many of which play like direct comments on the proliferation of generative AI in the real world — might work a bit better if the movie's human characters didn't feel so stiff. But the most compelling performance here comes from Davis, who played M3gan as a slightly more sophisticated, complicated version of herself. While M3gan 2.0 has its moments, the original's novelty feels lacking here because of how preoccupied it is with aping elements of bigger, blockbuster-type sci-fi features. And despite the increased scale and ambition — and the 2.0 in the title — the sequel doesn't end up feeling like much of an upgrade. M3gan 2.0 also stars Aristotle Athari, Timm Sharp, and Jemaine Clement. The movie is in theaters now.

‘M3GAN 2.0' Reviews: Is AI Robot Sequel Programmed For Success?
‘M3GAN 2.0' Reviews: Is AI Robot Sequel Programmed For Success?

Forbes

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

‘M3GAN 2.0' Reviews: Is AI Robot Sequel Programmed For Success?

M3GAN (Amie Donald, voiced by Jenna Davis) in "M3GAN 2.0." M3GAN 2.0 — the sequel to the 2022 horror hit starring Allison Williams — is new in theaters this week. Read on to find out what critics have to say about the movie. Directed by M3GAN filmmaker Gerard Johnstone, M3GAN 2.0 plays in Thursday previews before opening in theaters nationwide on Friday. The official summary for M3GAN 2.0 reads, 'Two years after M3GAN, a marvel of artificial intelligence, went rogue and embarked on a murderous (and impeccably choreographed) rampage and was subsequently destroyed, M3GAN's creator Gemma (Williams) has become a high-profile author and advocate for government oversight of A.I. "Meanwhile, Gemma's niece Cady (Violet McGraw), now 14, has become a teenager, rebelling against Gemma's overprotective rules. Unbeknownst to them, the underlying tech for M3GAN has been stolen and misused by a powerful defense contractor to create a military-grade weapon known as Amelia (Ivanna Sakhno), the ultimate killer infiltration spy. "But as Amelia's self-awareness increases, she becomes decidedly less interested in taking orders from humans. Or in keeping them around. With the future of human existence on the line, Gemma realizes that the only option is to resurrect M3GAN (Amie Donald, voiced by Jenna Davis) and give her a few upgrades, making her faster, stronger, and more lethal. As their paths collide, the original AI icon is about to meet her match.' M3GAN 2.0 also stars Brian Jordan Alvarez and Jen Van Epps, who return from the 2022 film as Gemma's tech team members Cole and Tess. New to the cast for the sequel are Aristotle Athari, Timm Sharp and Jemaine Clement. The review embargo for M3GAN 2.0 was lifted on Wednesday. As of the publication of this article, the film has earned a 62% 'fresh' rating from Rotten Tomatoes critics based on 61 reviews. RT's Critics Consensus and Popcornmeter score from verified user ratings is still pending. What Do Individual Critics Have To Say About 'M3GAN 2.0'? John Nugent of Empire Magazine is among the top critics on Rotten Tomatoes who gave M3GAN 2.0, writing, 'M3GAN 2.0 is more absurd, self-aware silliness: a riot of timely tech paranoia, with almost no horror but a ton of successful comedy. Slay, queen!' Robbie Colin of the Daily Telegraph (UK) also got a charge out of M3GAN 2.0, writing on RT, 'This uproarious (if not especially scary) sequel has the measure of the task at hand's silliness, and leans into it with infectious glee.' The film also received a 'fresh' rating on RT from Clarissa Loughrey of the Independent (UK), who writes, 'M3GAN 2.0 is, admittedly, a pretty bizarre conflagration of tones and ideas. But so were most of the Child's Play films ... and the rollercoaster effect of never quite knowing what genre [Gerard] Johnstone might pull from next is a key part of the fun.' On the flip side, David Fear of Rolling Stone gives M3GAN 2.0 a 'rotten' review on RT, writing, 'Her model is 2.0. The overbaked, underwhelming, narratively restless movie itself is 0.0 percent watchable.' David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter also gives M3GAN 2.0 a 'rotten' review on RT, writing in his summary, 'A convoluted mishmash with shades of Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Mission: Impossible and the Austin Powers franchise. There are amusing moments reminiscent of the original, but in terms of tone and coherence, the movie loses its way.' Alison Foreman of IndieWire isn't a fan of M3GAN 2.0, either, writing in his 'rotten' review on RT, 'M3GAN's greatest asset was never her heart, but her lack of one. It's somewhat baffling, then, that she is easily the most likable character in a lineup of algorithmically hateable humans.' Rated PG-13, M3GAN 2.0 plays in Thursday previews before opening in theaters nationwide on Friday.

‘M3GAN 2.0' Is an Antihero Upgrade, But at a Cost
‘M3GAN 2.0' Is an Antihero Upgrade, But at a Cost

Gizmodo

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Gizmodo

‘M3GAN 2.0' Is an Antihero Upgrade, But at a Cost

M3GAN 2.0 delivers a bloody slay of a sequel, one that elevates Blumhouse's sci-fi horror darling and gives its icon an action-packed upgrade–one that works, albeit at the expense of the original's horror roots. You can't keep a killer down, or a killer doll for that matter, as the end of the first film teased, as 2.0 opens with M3GAN (voiced by Jenna Davis, and physically portrayed by Amie Donald) having taken refuge in the cloud after he defeat. In the sequel, we discover that while Gemma (Allison Williams) and Cady (Violet McGraw) worked through their new family dynamic, M3GAN worked through how maybe she jumped to extremes with her relentless directive to protect her assigned child. Her omni-presence to Gemma and Cady is cleverly revealed when Gemma becomes the target of an assassination attempt by a weaponized android named AMELIA (Ahsoka's Ivanna Sakhno) who has turned on its creators and operators. This includes Gemma, as AMELIA was programed utilizing stolen files of her M3GAN designs from the first film–putting Cady's life in danger once more. M3GAN 2.0 matures its main villain into an anti-hero with a satisfying pivot that pulls a similar success story to the evolution of Arnold Schwarzenegger's Terminator in Terminator 2. M3GAN is as sassy as ever, and self-aware that her previous actions were dangerous, but plays into the metanarrative around the original film that made her an immediate camp icon. Williams' performance compliments M3GAN's own evolution perfectly, as she plays up Gemma with Elizabeth Holmes tones to explain away her inability to make human connections with new goal of her own: to make up for the lack of oversight she had on her tech, she's now an advocate for regulations in AI advancements for big corporations. Evolving both women before pushing them to work together to defend Cady from AMELIA is a smart move that 2.0 mines to great effect. Its such a bold move that no longer pits these strong as hell women against each other (honestly, giving Cady two mother figures now is iconic, and feels like another self-aware nod to M3GAN's IRL embrace of being a queer icon). It's also just fun to see the ways they also feed into each other's darker impulses: you see Gemma take a chance on M3GAN as AMELIA hunts one of the Musk-esque minds that made her, by letting M3GAN loose again in an updated, snazzier body. It's here 2.0 begins to establish itself as more of an action film send up than another horror film, a divergence that it manages to do mostly successfully. Some fans might be disappointed by the switch–M3GAN literally loses her edge for most of the film when Gemma adds a chip to her system to dial down her killer response. Whether its mostly to keep it PG-13 or not; returning director Gerard Johnstone tosses creepiness out the window early on, for better or worse. After the first act of setup, 2.0 goes full-throttle with its action set-pieces (including of course, a mandatory training montage), but again, much of the blood and gore of the first film is lost in exchange for over-the-top, slick action. There's still as much blood as they can possibly get away with, but that's more on AMELIA's part than M3GAN, to her and our frustration. Johnstone leans on balancing the comedy and action with riffs on tropes from genre that suit M3GAN, but checking boxes doesn't exactly offer anything new in the process. It leaves 2.0 feeling predictable as it builds towards its climax, making you want M3GAN's violence handicap device off sooner than later–and once we do get a return of the killer doll diva, the fun is fleeting, wrapping up the film a little too quickly, and a little too safely, for its own good. M3GAN 2.0 is solid, and mines M3GAN's place in the current pop culture moment for all it's worth, but it just doesn't push genre boundaries like the first film did. It put its own proverbial play-it-safe device on for most of the film to engage in a litany of classic action movie tropes, which are fun, but occasionally border on parody. The film remains an entertaining romp, and M3GAN's redemption arc is the film's strength, but some of the ways we get there overstay their need, especially if fans of the original's flair for fun and inventive violence get sparks of the original's in moments that come few and far between along the way. That push and pull between acknowledging the viral success of the original even rubs off on M3GAN's wit in the process, with 2.0 at times lacking the sharp touch of original M3GAN screenwriter Akeela Cooper. Perhaps a third, almost inevitable at this point, entry in the series could find a better balance between the horror charms of the original and the second's high-camp action thrills. She still dances, she still can accessorize, but this time there's no sharp edges included in the box. M3GAN 2.0 opens this Friday, June 27. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store