[Blu-Ray Review] Greenland 2: Migration; Available March 31 From Lionsgate

[Blu-Ray Review] Greenland 2: Migration; Available March 31 From Lionsgate 1Greenland 2: Migration [Blu-Ray]

Director: Ric Roman Waugh

Cast: Gerard Butler, Morena Baccarin, Roman Griffin Davis

Release Date: March 31, 2026

A Review By: Kevin Lovell

Film Rating: 6.5/10
Disc Rating: 7.5/10

Synopsis:

In the aftermath of a comet strike that devastates most of the Earth, GREENLAND 2: MIGRATION follows devoted family man John Garrity (Gerard Butler) and his wife and son (Morena Baccarin, Roman Griffin Davis) after they’re forced to leave the safety of their bunker in Greenland to search for a new home in a shattered world. John leads the family on a dangerous journey, guided by his burning hope in a rumored safe haven. It’s a journey against the odds that will test the family’s deepest sense of love, sacrifice, and instinct to survive.

[Blu-Ray Review] Greenland 2: Migration; Available March 31 From Lionsgate 2

‘Greenland 2: Migration’ rejoins family man John Garrity and his wife and son years after they managed to miraculously reach the bunker before it was too late. As the world still suffers effects and storms from the comet strike that eradicated the majority of the world’s population, the bunker begins to become affected leading John to try and head out with his family in the hope of reaching the new supposed hope for humanity; the primary crash site of the meteor that is rumored to be the one healthy and green place remaining. Even as nature and the increasing violence between people slow them down, John refuses to give up until he ensures his family’s safety.

Directed once again by Ric Roman Waugh (Greenland, Angel Has Fallen) from a screenplay written by Mitchell LaFortune (Last Breath) and Chris Sparling (Greenland), Ric Roman Waugh does a capable job back at the helm for ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ guiding along the sequel with plenty of tension, emotion and visual splendor. The cast of the sequel includes Gerard Butler (Den of Thieves), Morena Baccarin (Deadpool), Roman Griffin Davis (The Long Walk), Amber Rose Revah (TV’s The Punisher), Sophie Thompson (TV’s Silo), Trond Fausa Aurvåg (Oppenheimer), and William Abadie (TV’s Emily in Paris), with most offering solid or at the very least decent performances in each of their respective roles.

[Blu-Ray Review] Greenland 2: Migration; Available March 31 From Lionsgate 3

‘Greenland 2: Migration’ delivers an interesting, emotional and frequently thrilling sequel that doesn’t quite manage to maintain the intensity and hectic tone of its predecessor and occasionally feels like it’s going out of its way to create tension and visual spectacle, but almost always manages to keep the viewer entertained and engaged along the way and looks and sounds awfully spectacular throughout. It does a decent job of crafting a new chapter in the story which feels logical and even fairly natural for the most part, and offers some new emotional concerns for our family to help make the struggle of their quest feel all the more dire.

It repeatedly throws one dangerous situation after another at the family in order to make sure there’s always something disaster-related popping up although it tends to get a little ridiculous at times and the deadly scenarios they’re repeatedly forced to take on range from tense and sensible to ridiculous and repetitive as they start to become a little too conveniently timed in their consistency. Fortunately the heart of the family’s connection and journey as well as the other stakes at hand do help it to avoid falling into goofy territory and as a whole it’s actually a pretty capable sequel that’s right up there with the original in many respects.

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Overall, ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ is a visually spectacular, often fairly tense and surprisingly emotional sequel that follows the continuing journey of a man and his family as they must trek through a ravaged and dangerous world to track down a rumored location that just might be their only chance at a real future. If you enjoyed the first film and tend to appreciate a disaster film that’s packed with stellar visual and audio effects, along with a decent cast and a surprising amount of emotion at times then ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ is recommended and well worth giving a whirl. Fans who loved the first film should be safe enough making a blind purchase, while it should also be worth the price of a rental for those who aren’t determined to own it and merely want to see it.

[Blu-Ray Review] Greenland 2: Migration; Available March 31 From Lionsgate 5

VIDEO:

The Blu-ray release of ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ features a full 1080p High Definition presentation with the film’s original 2.39:1 Aspect Ratio. The video presentation looks spectacular as a whole and provides a sharp, clean and beautifully detailed presentation from start to finish that never suffers from any unexpected troubles or glitches throughout. Detail is tremendous on character specifics and interiors as well as the expansive, scorched landscapes and more, while colors are properly clean and bold and black levels are suitably rich and deep. Overall, this is a fantastic high definition presentation that delivers splendidly at every turn and should easily please fans and newcomers alike.

AUDIO:

The Blu-ray release features a Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 channel compatible) soundtrack. Please note that this review pertains solely to the Dolby TrueHD 7.1 audio presentation. This multichannel soundtrack sounds outstanding and it serves up a clean, crisp and wildly aggressive audio presentation throughout. It constantly takes full advantage of all seven available channels in order to send a whirlwind of activity repeatedly whipping throughout the various speakers as everything from storms, meteor fragments and violent winds, along with bullets, explosions and debris, plus more overtakes the channels with aggression and precision; never conflicting with any simultaneously occurring dialogue or other audio elements along the way. Overall, this is a magnificent Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 compatible) soundtrack that repeatedly impresses and immerses the viewer in the tension and chaos.

SPECIAL FEATURES:

The Blu-ray release of ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ offers some entertaining extras in the way of Behind the Scenes Featurettes. They include ‘Rebuilding: Ric Roman Waugh’ (running approximately 8 minutes in length), ‘Pushing Forward: Gerard Butler’ (running approximately 10 minutes), ‘Heart and Soul: Morena Baccarin’ (approximately 7 minutes), and ‘What We Leave Behind: Roman Griffin Davis’ (3 minutes). The film’s ‘Theatrical Trailer’ (2 minutes) is also included.

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[Blu-Ray Review] Greenland 2: Migration; Available March 31 From Lionsgate 7

greenland 2, blu-ray review

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*Please note that the above images are taken from the Blu-Ray and resized. They will additionally suffer quality loss as a result of .jpg compression. Larger versions of each image can be viewed by clicking on the image. All images and content included on this Blu-Ray release are the property of their respective owners.

Film Rating: 6.5/10
Disc Rating: 7.5/10

‘Greenland 2: Migration’ Arrives on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray & DVD on March 31, 2026 & is Now Available on Digital from Thunder Road, STX Films & Lionsgate

You can purchase ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ on Blu-ray at Amazon HERE!

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