🎬 Step Brothers 2 (2025)
👉 Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Mary Steenburgen
Growing up was never really an option for Brennan Huff and Dale Doback — and in Step Brothers 2, their legendary immaturity crashes headfirst into adulthood with even bigger laughs, louder meltdowns, and the same ridiculous chemistry that made the original a comedy classic.

Back in 2008, Adam McKay’s Step Brothers gave us the unforgettable pairing of Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly as two spoiled, unemployed man-children forced into brotherhood when their single parents got married. What started as an epic rivalry — complete with drum kit sabotage, sleepwalking chaos, and the iconic “Boats ’N Hoes” — turned into one of the strangest, sweetest bromances ever put on screen.

In this long-awaited sequel, Brennan (Ferrell) and Dale (Reilly) are older, but not much wiser. Still clinging to their juvenile antics, they find themselves once again thrown into a situation that demands responsibility — whether it’s starting a family business they’re hopelessly unqualified to run, attempting to move out of their parents’ house, or stumbling through a world that refuses to cater to their childlike logic. Every attempt at maturity backfires in spectacular fashion, leading to one absurd disaster after another.

Mary Steenburgen returns as Brennan’s endlessly patient mother, trying her best to encourage her son to grow up — even as she secretly enjoys his ridiculous antics. Richard Jenkins (as Dale’s exasperated dad) once again provides the perfect straight-man foil, delivering dry, defeated one-liners while watching his household unravel in spectacular fashion.

From over-the-top job interviews and disastrous business pitches to a new, even more unhinged musical number that rivals their legendary rap duo, the sequel is packed with outrageous set pieces destined to become just as quotable as the first.
Step Brothers 2 is more than just a reunion — it’s proof that some bonds are so hilariously dysfunctional, they only get stronger with age. Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly prove once again that growing up is optional, stupidity is timeless, and when you put two overgrown kids in a room together, the result will always be pure comedy chaos.
