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UNIVERSAL

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Pierre Perifel
Cast:
Sam Rockwell, Awkwafina, Marc Maron
Writing Credits:
Yoni Brenner, Etan Cohen

Synopsis:
The Bad Guys struggle to find trust and acceptance in their newly minted lives as Good Guys when they get pulled out of retirement and forced to do one last job by an all-female squad of criminals.

Box Office:
Budget:
$80 Million.
Opening Weekend:
$21,995,715 on 3852 Screens.
Domestic Gross:
$80,973,790.

MPAA:
Rated PG.

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1
Audio:
English Dolby Atmos
Spanish Dolby 7.1
French Dolby 7.1
English DVS
Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French

Runtime: 104 min.
Price: $29.98
Release Date: 10/7/2025

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Director Pierre Perifel, Co-Director JP Sans, Head of Character Animation Benjamin Willis, Head of Story Katherine De Vries and Head of Cinematography, Layout Théophile Bondoux
• Animated Short
• 2 Deleted Scenes
• “Out of Line” Featurette
• “Double Jeopardy” Featurette
• “Meet the Gang” Featurette
• “Double Trouble” Featurette
• “Causing a Scene” Featurette
• “Planning the Heist” Featurette
• “Sketching the Bad Girls” Featurette


PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM

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-SVS SB12-NSD 12" 400-watt Sealed Box Subwoofer


RELATED REVIEWS


The Bad Guys 2 [Blu-Ray] (2025)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (October 9, 2025)

Although 2022’s The Bad Guys didn’t turn into a major smash, the animated tale brought in $250 million worldwide on a budget of roughly $70 million. That became a tidy enough profit for DreamWorks to greenlight 2025’s logically titled The Bad Guys 2.

Although former criminals Mr. Wolf (voiced by Sam Rockwell), Ms. Tarantula (Awkwafina), Mr. Snake (Marc Maron), Mr. Shark (Craig Robinson) and Mr. Piranha (Anthony Ramos) try to leave that life behind, they find that society still views them as “bad guys”. This makes it difficult for them to move ahead on the straight and narrow.

In the midst of this, the newly-christened “Good Guys” find themselves abducted by current criminals Kitty Kat (Danielle Brooks), Pigtail Petrova (Maria Bakalova) and Doom (Natasha Lyonne). They need help to pull off a massive caper so Mr. Wolf and company agree to avoid some dire consequences.

As noted at the start, 2022’s Bad Guys turned a profit but didn’t become a major hit. The same goes for Bad 2.

With an $80 million budget, it cost a little more than its predecessor. With a $217 million worldwide gross, it earned a little bit less.

But the movie still probably went into the black. This likely means a Bad Guys 3 at some point.

To my surprise, I welcome a third entry in the series. Whereas the 2022 film left me disenchanted, the sequel works pretty darned well.

My biggest issue with the original flick stemmed from my perception that the filmmakers coasted on its premise. They appeared to feel that the movie’s “high concept” notion of villains who attempt to turn good would carry the day.

It didn’t. Instead, Bad Guys often felt like a plot-free compilation of set pieces that never gelled or offered much entertainment.

To some degree, Bad 2 repeats the same basic plot. The leads tried to “go straight” in the first movie and they continue those attempts here.

Potential redundancy aside, the story simply works much better here, perhaps because Bad 2 manages to develop the characters in a more effective manner. It builds on the roots found in the first movie and makes the various roles more engaging.

Bad 2 just feels a lot looser. This ensures it doesn’t force its concepts and comedy down our throats.

With some self-confidence at the backs of the filmmakers, they manage to let the characters and plot breathe better here. As such, the movie flows more smoothly and creates a more involving journey.

Bad 2 also manages to integrate a mix of new roles surprisingly well. Because sequels almost always introduce a bunch of fresh participants, these films often get bogged down thanks to all the mouths they must feed.

That doesn’t become an issue here. The roles added to Bad 2 fit the rest well and don’t become a drag on the proceedings.

All of this means I chalk up Bad Guys 2 as a very pleasant surprise. While the prior film seemed dull and perfunctory, the sequel becomes a bright and lively mix of comedy and action.

Footnote: a sequel-teasing tag scene appears about two minutes, 30 seconds into the end credits and an extremely brief and inconsequential tag shows up at the very conclusion.


The Disc Grades: Picture A-/ Audio A-/ Bonus B-

The Bad Guys 2 appears in an aspect ratio of 2.39:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. As anticipated, this became an excellent presentation.

Sharpness was fine across the board. Virtually no softness appeared, as the movie delivered satisfying definition.

No signs of jagged edges or moiré effects occurred, and edge haloes were absent. Of course, print flaws never manifested themselves.

The film’s palette offered a general pastel tone, with an emphasis on ambers, blues and greens. The colors showed a good sense of vividness and worked well.

Blacks were dark and deep, while low-light shots offered nice clarity and smoothness. This became an appealing visual presentation.

Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, we got a Dolby Atmos soundtrack that offered a lively soundscape, especially during the many action sequences. Those fleshed out the spectrum in an involving way and gave us good involvement for these spectacles.

These traits kicked into even higher gear as the movie progressed. While the film came with plenty of sonic action from its start, the climax got even crazier, and the various speakers added real kick to the proceedings.

Audio quality seemed pleasing. Speech always sounded distinctive and concise, while music was peppy and rich.

Effects offered solid reproduction, with clean highs and deep lows. I liked this mix and thought it gave the movie life.

As we shift to extras, we open with an audio commentary from director Pierre Perifel, co-director JP Sans, Head of Character Animation Benjamin Willis, Head of Story Katherine De Vries and Head of Cinematography, Layout Théophile Bondoux. All five sit together for this running, screen-specific look at story/characters, cast and performances, visual design and animation, editing and cut scenes, music and audio, Easter eggs and related topics.

I thought this became a good but not great commentary. While the participants touch on a compelling array of topics, the track just lacks something special to make it terrific. Still, it does the job.

A new animated short, Little Lies and Alibis goes for five minutes, 42 seconds and shows wacky events that caused the Bad Guys to arrive late to their last parole meeting. With the original cast all involved, it becomes an amusing adventure.

Two Deleted Scenes appear: “Lowrider Chase” (2:18) and “Crime Sisters” (3:34). Both offer entertainment, and “Sisters” adds some character information for Diane.

The segments include intros from Perifel and Sans. They put the clips in context and explain why they didn’t make the movie.

We find seven featurettes, and Out of Line runs two minutes, six seconds as it shows footage of the actors in the recording studio. I enjoy this kind of material, even if this becomes an awfully short reel.

Double Jeopardy spans four minutes, 46 seconds. It delivers info from Perifel, Sans, DeVries, Willis, producer Damon Ross, visual effects supervisor Matt Baer, editor Jesse Averna, and actors Zazie Beetz, Maria Bakalova, Anthony Ramos, Marc Maron, Danielle Brooks, Sam Rockwell, Natasha Lyonne, and Awkwafina.

We get thoughts about the development of the sequel as well as story/characters. A few minor insights emerge but most of “Double” feels like fluff.

With Meet the Gang, we get a seven-minute, 37-second reel. This one involves Ross, Rockwell, Ramos, Sans, Maron, Awkwafina, Perifel, Beetz, Brooks, Lyonne, Willis, DeVries, Bakalova, and Averna.

Like the title implies, “Gang” looks at cast, characters and performances. Expect ore happy talk and not much substance.

Double Trouble lasts nine minutes, two seconds. It gives us remarks from Brooks, Lyonne, Bakalova, Beetz, Awkwafina and animal trainer Molly O’Neill as the actors meet real-life representatives of the critters they portray in the movie. It leans cutesy but it comes with enough facts about the animals to merit a look.

Next comes Causing a Scene. Via this five-minute, 16-second sequence, we locate statements from Awkwafina, Perifel, Ross, Rockwell, Averna, De Vries, Sans, Bondoux, Baer, Ramon, Maron, Willis, and Head of Lighting & Compositing Joanna Wu.

The reel looks at the approach of the co-directors, editing and story construction, visual choices, and animation. We find another mix of good notes and basic praise.

Planning the Heist occupies 10 minutes, eight seconds and shows Perifel and Sans as they brainstorm how to depict a particular scene. I strongly suspect we see a recreation of their interactions and not actual collaboration but this nonetheless gives us an interesting view of the creative processes.

Finally, Sketching the Bad Girls takes up a total of 10 minutes, 49 seconds as Perifel shows us how to draw Kitty, Doom and Pigtail. However, it takes an unusual format.

Sans pretends to have witnessed a crime and he describes the critters he saw to a “detective” – aka producer Ross - while Perifel illustrates what Sans says. This comes as a clever way to provide the usual “how to draw” tutorial.

Though the first movie seemed mediocre, The Bad Guys 2 turns into a rollicking blast. A lively mix of comedy, action and heist shenanigans, it barrels out of the gate and winds up as a consistent bucket of fun. The Blu-ray comes with excellent picture and audio as well as a mix of bonus features. Chalk up Bad Guys 2 as an unexpected treat.

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