Review by Jon Donnis
Wicked: For Good arrives with the weight of expectation on its shoulders, picking up the second act of the stage musical and the story left hanging at the end of the 2024 film. Jon M. Chu once again leans into spectacle, and you can feel the confidence of a director who knows this world inside out. The film looks gorgeous. Every frame seems shaped to draw you deeper into Oz, from the shadowed forests where Elphaba hides to the polished glow of the Emerald City. When the music swells, the production finds its stride. Big show tunes fill the space with energy and feeling, and the film wears its heart on its sleeve with numbers about loyalty, love, and the price of standing firm.
Cynthia Erivo carries the whole thing with remarkable presence. She gives Elphaba real depth, and you can feel every bit of frustration and heartbreak as she fights for the truth and tries to keep hold of whatever hope she has left. Jonathan Bailey gives Fiyero a warmth that helps ground the darker moments, and Jeff Goldblum breezes from charm to menace without ever slipping out of place. The returning ensemble fits neatly into this larger, heavier chapter. Fans of the first film will probably sink straight back into it, pleased to find much of the original tone still intact.
That said, the cracks show. The film sits at 2 hours and 18 minutes, and you feel every minute of it. For all the time it spends lingering on detail, the ending somehow rushes by in a blur. It leaves you wondering why the pacing could not have been tightened in the earlier acts. Ariana Grande's Glinda never quite settles either. Her performance feels oddly muted in a story that demands a far stronger emotional punch from her character. The film tries to recapture the magic of its predecessor, although the first one was not exactly beloved across the board. That comparison ends up highlighting the weaker moments here. There is spectacle, yes, but that spark that lifts a musical into something truly memorable never fully appears.
There is a sense throughout that the studio wanted lightning to strike twice. The first film drew huge attention thanks to relentless promotion. This one feels like an attempt to follow that momentum rather than create something that stands on its own. Whether that pays off remains to be seen. It could settle comfortably into fan favourite territory, or it could fade beneath the inevitable chatter about sequel fatigue.
Wicked: For Good will please viewers who already loved the first film, and they may even find it adds emotional weight to moments they already cared about. Beyond that crowd, it may struggle to justify its length or its timing. Even so, I would still give it a generous 7 out of 10.
In Cinemas Now!





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