After the first film fascinated the world, M3GAN 2.0 returned with an offbeat plot and plenty of changes that ensured it had a separate identity. The movie introduced some inventive plot devices like ...
Ivanna Sakhno is stepping into the M3GAN universe with a kind of joyful curiosity and a healthy dose of philosophical depth. In an exclusive interview with Where Is The Buzz, the Ukrainian actress ...
A broken clock is right twice a day, but even at its funniest, “M3GAN 2.0” feels like it’s here too soon and too late. Filmmaker Gerard Johnstone returns with a frustrating and tedious follow-up to ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover Hollywood and entertainment. M3GAN 2.0, a sequel to the 2022 hit M3GAN starring Allison Williams, is now in theaters. When ...
In the beginning, there was one killer robot, but now that robot wants to take down another killer robot. “M3GAN 2.0” is here, and she’s even more lethal than a French Tickle Me Elmo. Deco caught up ...
Gerard Johnstone, the New Zealand-born director of 2023's horror-comedy M3GAN and its upcoming follow-up M3GAN 2.0, knows that sequels are damn hard to pull off. How do you top an endlessly-memed ...
Everyone’s favorite homicidal doll, M3GAN, is back for another outing, and nobody’s more excited about it than Gerard Johnstone. The director, who helmed the mega-viral 2022 campy horror hit “M3GAN,” ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover Hollywood and entertainment. M3GAN 2.0, the sequel to the 2022 horror hit M3GAN, is reportedly coming soon to digital ...
For Ivanna Sakhno, portraying an AI robot in "M3GAN 2.0" was a lesson in being human. "Something that really moved me about AMELIA is that even though she is artificial intelligence, there's quite a ...
The problem with M3GAN 2.0, the sequel to 2022's surprise hit/meme-generator about a killer robot determined to protect her young charge, is that its title denotes something that the film's audience ...
Any technology we don’t fully comprehend we turn into horror, a truism that reaches back to Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” (medical science) and ahead to “The Ring” (VCRs). Of late, the bogeymen have ...