"Ne Zha 2" is currently the highest grossing film of 2025. It's a Chinese animated retelling of events from the life of the mythological figure Ne Zha. It's also a sequel to the 2019 "Ne Zha" film, which did very well at the box office, but nowhere near what the sequel has achieved. "Ne Zha 2" is a bona fide phenomenon, having grossed roughly $2 billion worldwide, and the Mandarin version even took $20 million in the U.S., though the English dub flopped. My parents, who never talk about movies, brought this one up in conversation unprompted. So, it brings me no joy to report that I've seen both "Ne Zha" films and I don't like either.
Based loosely on the classical novel "Investiture of the Gods," this version of Ne Zha (Lu Yanting) is a bratty child reincarnation of a demon, who is born to loving human parents (Lu Qi, Chen Hao). He and his spirit brother/best friend of Ao Bing (Han Mo), the son of a Dragon God, Ao Guang (Li Nan), were killed in the first movie and are revived by Ne Zha's master Taiyi Zhenren (Zhang Jiaming) into new bodies. However, Ao Bing's new form is damaged, so Ne Zha's goal is to become an immortal and join the sect of the Taoist, Wuliang (Wang Deshun), to help get Ao Bing a new body. However, the immortal Shen Gongbao (Yang Wei), a group of troublemaking dragons, and a few other enemies are going to make that very tough for him.
If this plot sounds rather complicated and unwieldy, that's because it is. I soon gave up trying to keep any of the characters and their motivations straight, because it depends heavily on being familiar with certain tropes of Chinese literature and mythology that the movie assumes that you already know. It helps to just think of Ne Zha and anybody he likes as the heroes, and everyone else is probably going to be a villain for various reasons that ultimately aren't too important. The first half of the movie is mostly humorous and farcical, as you'd expect with your average animated kids' film. Ne Zha and Ao Bing are stuck sharing a body, and Taiyi Zhenren tries to pass off Ne Zha as a model student and candidate for immortality to Wuliang. There's a lot of tiresome toilet humor in both of the "Ne Zha" movies in a way that is very Chinese, but not any more appealing to me than when Western comedies resort to it.
The second half of the movie is pure spectacle, with the various gods and demons going to battle against one another. There are lots of beautiful, large-scale fighting sequences, interesting creature designs, and big dramatic confrontations rendered with plenty of lovely CGI animation. The Chinese animation industry has been steadily improving over the past decade to the point where the level of quality is on par with most of the Western studios. "Ne Zha 2" significantly improves on the first "Ne Zha" visually, and the spectacle is the best thing that it has going for it. Unfortunately, it wasn't good enough to be worth watching simply for the lights and colors, and I found the story too incoherent to be invested in. There are so many fake out deaths and resurrections, it never felt like there were any meaningful stakes to the battles. And did I mention the film runs 143 eye-watering minutes?
The character of Ne Zha is appealing and fun, and I understand why he's popular. He's a naughty little stinker of a kid, but with superpowers and a heroic destiny. I expect that the audience that will have the best time with him will likewise be children, who may not be so bothered by the movie's byzantine worldbuilding and overly busy plotting. However, for me "Ne Zha 2" has very little that I find appealing, and too much that I found myself patiently tolerating. That's not uncommon for me with certain kids' films, but I was hoping for better from a movie with this much hype and fuss around it. Then again, I've found very few of the big box office winners out of China and Japan to my taste, so I guess this is just par for the course.
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