The Equalizer 2 [upd] (2026)
The first film was about helping strangers. This time, it’s personal. The emotional core involving his late wife is handled with restraint, making the final confrontation feel less like a mission and more like a funeral. What Doesn’t: The Pacing Problem If you are expecting a non-stop action flick, The Equalizer 2 will test your patience. The film spends a lot of time in McCall’s Lyft car, listening to passengers talk about their problems. While this builds character, it slows the momentum to a crawl in the middle hour.
The action scenes are brutal, efficient, and creative. One standout scene involving a hotel room in a Turkish sandstorm is pure chaos done right. McCall doesn’t use fancy gadgets; he uses what is available—corkscrews, heavy books, and his signature stopwatch. The Equalizer 2
If you loved the first one, you will respect this one. Just adjust your expectations: bring patience for the drama and adrenaline for the finale. The first film was about helping strangers
Spoiler-free verdict: It’s a worthy ride, but it plays by different rules. Robert McCall (Denzel Washington) is still trying to live a quiet life. By day, he’s a Lyft driver navigating the streets of Boston. By night (and sometimes during rush hour), he is still the guardian angel for the exploited and the helpless. What Doesn’t: The Pacing Problem If you are

