Good Boys 2 (2025)

🎬 Good Boys 2 (2025)
👉 Jacob Tremblay, Keith L. Williams, Brady Noon

Growing up was never going to be smooth — and for Max (Jacob Tremblay), Lucas (Keith L. Williams), and Thor (Brady Noon), it’s about to get even messier. Good Boys 2 brings back everyone’s favorite trio of foul-mouthed sixth-graders-turned-seventh-graders, who once survived a disastrous day filled with stolen drugs, angry teenagers, skipped classes, and one unforgettable attempt to act “cool.”

Now, the boys are a little older, but not much wiser. Middle school has brought new challenges: crushes that are more complicated, parties that are way more intimidating, and rules that are harder to bend without getting caught. Determined to prove they’re no longer kids, Max, Lucas, and Thor set out on another mission to cement their status as “legends” — but as always, nothing goes according to plan.

From awkward first dates gone horribly wrong, to run-ins with high school bullies, to yet another round of catastrophes involving things they don’t fully understand, the boys stumble through adolescence with the same blend of innocence and outrageous mischief. Along the way, their loyalty is tested by new friendships, budding romances, and the creeping realization that growing up means sometimes growing apart.

Jacob Tremblay continues to ground the comedy as Max, the hopeless romantic whose heart is bigger than his sense of judgment. Keith L. Williams shines as Lucas, the sweet and overly honest moral compass of the group, whose inability to lie keeps landing them in deeper trouble. Brady Noon once again steals scenes as Thor, still determined to be a “bad boy,” even as his theater-kid dreams keep clashing with his tough-guy act.

Like the first film, Good Boys 2 balances raunchy, laugh-out-loud set pieces with moments of genuine heart, showing that even in the chaos of pre-teen disasters, friendship is the glue that holds everything together. With bigger gags, crazier stunts, and an even more cringe-worthy look at the awkward transition into teenagehood, this sequel proves that being twelve (or thirteen) is a comedy goldmine.

Hilarious, outrageous, and unexpectedly sweet, Good Boys 2 reminds us that growing up isn’t about getting it right — it’s about surviving the embarrassment, sticking by your friends, and laughing at the disaster along the way.

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