LOS ANGELES, Jan. 8 (UPI) -- Greenland 2: Migration, in theaters Friday, is a worthy successor to the 2020 disaster movie. It follows a natural evolution of excitement while continuing the first film's human threads.
The Garrity family and other survivors have lived in the Greenland bunker for five years since the Clarke comet hit the Earth. They are running out of food and water, though still seem to have plenty of makeup, but the Hollywood glamour is forgivable.
When the bunker collapses, it forces survivors to find a new safe haven. John (Gerard Butler), Allison (Morena Baccarin) and their son Nathan (Roman Griffin Davis) join a group of survivors who believe the south of France remained habitable post Clarke.
The film really gets going again and moves briskly from peril to peril. It makes sense that Clarke has left the world in a precarious state.
So pressures on the earth would collapse the bunker, and dried up bodies of water have created precarious chasms to cross in high winds. More Clarke fragments could fall at any time, and often do.






