Greenland 2: Migration 4K 2026 Ultra HD 2160p
Greenland sequel. In a continuation of the story, the Garrity family, who survive a near-extinction level event when an interstellar comet hits Earth, must leave the safety of the Greenland bunker and embark on a perilous journey across the decimated frozen wasteland of Europe to find a new home.
User Review
We don’t know yet if there will be a trilogy, but for now, the “Greenland” duology is amusing from the perspective of the world’s largest island. I mean, two movies are named after it, you know, but in reality, this vast territory northeast of the U.S. only appears at the end of the first film and the beginning of the second—that’s it. As they say, much ado about nothing! And it seems like they filmed the landscapes in Iceland. Yes, people needed a place to hide in case of a disaster, yes, somewhere to live and reproduce until the air cleared after the comet hit, yes, to build a new human society—but why, for heaven’s sake, Greenland?! That’s the one thing I just never understood at all. A vast territory, plenty of mineral resources, a cool climate? Or would the endless comet fragments never have reached it in a million years? As Gandalf said, questions, and questions demand answers.
By the way, some bloodthirsty comet did manage to reach the poor island, which hadn’t signed up for this blow, and people had to retreat in a hurry. It’s funny that for a full five years, a well-protected bunker stood quietly on the scorched earth, allowing people to drink fresh water, dance, sleep, practice yoga, and teach lessons to growing children. And as soon as the “five-year plan” came to an end, it was immediately time for migration—something they’d discussed at length back at headquarters but never quite dared to implement. Somehow, the wife of the main character, Gerard Butler, managed to worm her way into that headquarters. They didn’t get lost in the new community; they quickly rose through the ranks. Well, a passionate plot needs to move somewhere, so this forced migration can be seen as a way out of the comfort zone; the people had gotten too comfortable, and the comet with a man’s name is all...
It won’t settle down until it crushes everyone. After all, people are always harping on about it in real life: if you want change, then move, crawl out of your hole and go—you’ll end up somewhere. Accordingly, the main character and his family will travel a very long way to the so-called Promised Land, meeting various boring characters along the way who didn’t have much of an impact on the family of three. Just passing acquaintances who will be forgotten in a week. The most entertaining, of course, was the Frenchman who is surviving as best he can with his paralyzed wife and daughter, who starts to feel hungry at the sight of an American meal. It turns out this kid was played by Roman Griffin Davis from *Jojo Rabbit*! How quickly kids manage to change in just a few years and lose their childlike charm, unless they’re Elijah Wood or Haley Joel Osment...
Anyway, this French guy, in a day or even less than a day, suddenly tells the stern Gerard Butler that he and his wife can’t leave their home—they’ll manage to survive somehow—but take our beautiful little daughter with you and bring her to the paradise you’re searching for; she’ll figure things out on her own from there. For some inexplicable reason, the guy suddenly develops such respect for these kind Americans that he hands his own child over to strangers. Well, okay, we’ll buy that! Then they show military bases in England and France, and the situation there looks exactly the same as it did before the comet hit Earth in the first movie. Soldiers are shooting and blocking the way, while people beg and rage because they can’t get to safe places. And again, it’s unclear: if all the important people were gathered in Greenland, why are they suddenly living there quite happily...
Command centers in countries separated by a well-known strait. Not the most logically coherent film, of course, but it’s certainly not something shamefully cheap. There are some decent explosions here and there, the color grading is quite fitting for a post-apocalyptic setting, and there’s no shortage of beautiful, vivid landscapes. I was particularly impressed by the English Channel, where there’s no water left. Imagine Gerard Butler sitting there, unable to believe it, while his son stands nearby, genuinely amazed that there used to be water there. It turned out to be such an engaging odyssey through beautiful natural landscapes with a melancholic undertone. For the main character, the ruthless screenwriters also came up with another, shall we say, personal problem, which is supposed to elicit tears and pity from the audience—well, you’ll find out for yourselves when you watch it. Overall, “Greenland 2: Migration” isn’t as bad as it seems. Yes, it’s not on the level of Emmerich’s great disaster movies.
Info Video
Codec: HEVC / H.265 (78.3 Mb/s)
Resolution: Native 4K (2160p)
HDR: HDR10+
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Info Audio
#English: Dolby TrueHD with Dolby Atmos 7.1
#English: Dolby Digital Plus with Dolby Atmos 5.1
#Spanish (Latino): Dolby Digital 5.1
Info Subtitles
English, Arabic, Bulgarian, Danish, Finnish, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (PT), Romanian, Spanish (Latin America), Swedish.File size: 57.36 GB











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