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The Accountant 2 is Fun but Doesn’t Balance the Books

Reviewed by Chris Corey
May 2, 2025

The Accountant 2

★ ★ ★

Something holds The Accountant 2 back from greatness. Don’t get me wrong — it’s a fun action romp with a great brothers-in-arms vibe. The fight scenes are well choreographed and entertaining. I think I know what it is — I’ll get into it after a quick story breakdown.

Ben Affleck stars once again as Christian Wolff, an accountant who happens to be an autistic savant. He’s also highly skilled in weapons and hand-to-hand combat. If you’re not up to speed on why an accountant would need these skills, you’ll want to watch the preceding film.

Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff

Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff
© 2025 Amazon MGM Studios

A friend of Christian’s and FinCEN director Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) has been killed while trying to find a missing immigrant family. Marybeth contacts Christian to see if he can help uncover why their friend was killed — and who this family is. Christian, fantastic at puzzles, is able to look at a crime board and start piecing together the reasons behind the killing and where the family’s missing father might be.

To move forward, Christian enlists his estranged brother, Braxton (Jon Bernthal), who is equally adept at combat and a major smartass. Christian and Braxton haven’t kept in touch since the events of the first film, despite an emotional reconnection at its conclusion. Christian, Braxton and Marybeth team up to track down the missing family, only to uncover a much broader, more nefarious conspiracy than they anticipate.

J.K. Simmons and Daniella Pineda

J.K. Simmons and Daniella Pineda
© 2025 Amazon MGM Studios

The subjects of the investigation – and the action sequences – are generally quite serious, delving into human sex trafficking. This clashes sharply with the buddy-action comedy tone the film otherwise presents. These stark contrasts work against the film and create a confused narrative. One minute we’re laughing; the next, we’re tracking truly evil people through very dark scenarios. The comedy dulls the weight of the evil Christian and Braxton are up against.

That’s what keeps this from being an excellent action film. The first movie kept an even keel, focusing on Christian’s dangerous work as an accountant for criminals — and his efforts to leave that life behind — while grappling with the advantages and disadvantages his autism brings. It was compelling, thrilling and entertaining.

Cynthia Addai-Robinson as Marybeth Medina

Cynthia Addai-Robinson as Marybeth Medina
© 2025 Amazon MGM Studios

Affleck’s accent has also changed from the first film, off only by a slight degree. But it’s enough to signal we’re watching an entirely different type of film.

It’s still a decent action movie, and the banter between Christian and Braxton is well written. Their brotherhood feels authentic and real. But the comedic elements clash with the film’s serious tones and throw off the balance. The puzzle pieces never quite click in place from good to great.

Rated: R for strong violence, and language throughout.
Running Time: 2h 5m
Directed by: Gavin O’Connor
Written by: Bill Dubuque
Starring: Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Daniella Pineda, J.K. Simmons

Action, Mystery & Thriller

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