Greenland 2: Migration (2026)


Five years after the comet turned the sky to fire, the Garritys crawl out of Greenland’s ice bunker into a world that’s still bleeding.
Gerard Butler’s John is no longer the desperate dad sprinting for shelter—he’s a hardened survivor, jaw set like permafrost, every decision carved from loss and love. Morena Baccarin’s Allison matches him scar for scar, her quiet ferocity the family’s true north. Roman Griffin Davis’ Nathan, now older and carrying ghosts in his eyes, reminds us what innocence costs in a place where hope is rationed.
Europe’s a graveyard of extremes: radiation storms that peel paint off bones, cities swallowed by black floods, meteor shards still punching holes in the horizon. Ric Roman Waugh doesn’t hold back—sweeping shots of fractured skylines crumbling under ash clouds, intimate moments of the family huddled against howling wind, every frame screaming that nature isn’t done punishing us yet.


The journey is brutal: alliances forged with strangers who might save or stab you, moral lines blurred in the fight for food, fuel, and a rumor of sanctuary. It’s disaster on an epic scale, but the heart stays stubbornly human—parents shielding their child from a world that won’t shield back.
Bigger, darker, more emotional than the original. Survival was the first chapter. This is what comes after.

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