The Bad Guys 2 Christian Review: Can Real Change Happen?
- Layne McDonald
- 1 day ago
- 4 min read
Updated: 24 hours ago
Christian Safety Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5 Stars)
Red Flag Count:
Profanity: 0 (worst word used: "fart")
Sexual Content: 0
Gore/Violence: Minimal cartoon action sequences
Spiritual Concerns: 0
You know what's harder than deciding to change? Actually staying changed. That's the gutsy question The Bad Guys 2 asks: and honestly, it's a question most Hollywood redemption stories never touch.
While the first Bad Guys film gave us the classic "bad guy goes good" arc, this sequel digs into something way more real (and way more Christian, if we're being honest): What happens after the conversion moment? What does it look like to wake up every single day and choose the narrow path when your old life keeps whispering in your ear?
The Setup: When "Good" Gets Boring
The film doesn't waste time. We open with Wolf and his crew living their new reformed lives: and it's not exactly thrilling. Gone are the adrenaline-pumping heists, the clever schemes, the rush of outsmarting everyone. Now it's community service, following rules, and doing the right thing even when nobody's watching.
Sound familiar?

Wolf wants to be good. He chose to be good. But part of him misses the excitement of his former life. The film brilliantly captures that internal war: the one the apostle Paul wrote about in Romans 7:19: "For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing."
This isn't a cute kid's movie dodging real spiritual struggle. This is a film that understands conversion isn't a one-time event: it's a daily decision.
Beyond John 3:16: The Luke 9:23 Reality
Here's where The Bad Guys 2 separates itself from typical redemption stories. Most movies end at the conversion: the big emotional moment where the character accepts grace and changes. Credits roll. Everyone's happy.
But Jesus never said, "Believe in Me and you're done." He said something much harder in Luke 9:23: "If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me."
Daily.
Not once. Not in a single transformative moment. Every. Single. Day.
The sequel explores this ongoing commitment with surprising depth. Wolf reaffirms that the good life is worth it, but the movie doesn't sugarcoat the cost. "Anyone who wants to change needs to start somewhere," the characters acknowledge, "and it won't always be easy or exciting."
That's real talk for families. That's the kind of honest conversation we need to have with our kids about what following Christ actually looks like.

What Parents Need to Know
Let's get practical for a second. Is this safe for your family? Absolutely.
The Bad Guys 2 is remarkably clean. We're talking zero profanity (the worst language is literally "fart"), no sexual content, no gore, and minimal cartoon violence that's less intense than your average Looney Tunes episode.
The core message: hope, loyalty, finding family, becoming a better person: aligns beautifully with Christian values. Now, the film doesn't explicitly mention God or faith (it's DreamWorks, not VeggieTales), but the spiritual themes are absolutely there for families who know how to spot them.
The movie emphasizes:
Undying loyalty to those who stand by you
Not judging others by appearances (a lesson from Samuel 16:7: "man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart")
The possibility of genuine transformation (hello, 2 Corinthians 5:17!)
The cost of discipleship and maintaining change over time
The Temptation Factor
One of the film's strongest moments is how it portrays temptation. Wolf isn't fighting some cartoonish devil on his shoulder. He's fighting his own memories of who he used to be: the excitement, the belonging, the sense of purpose he found in his old life.
That's incredibly relatable for anyone who's walked away from sin. Whether it's an addiction, a toxic relationship, or just old patterns of thinking, the pull of "what was" can be intense. The movie doesn't make Wolf's struggle easy or quick, and that's actually refreshing.
We live in a culture that wants instant transformation: lose weight in 30 days, find your purpose in three easy steps, become your best self by next Tuesday. But spiritual growth doesn't work like that. Sanctification is a lifelong process, and The Bad Guys 2 gets that.

Teaching Moments for Families
This is an excellent film for starting conversations with your kids about:
What real change looks like – It's not always dramatic or exciting
Why we keep choosing obedience even when it's hard – Because commitment matters more than feelings
How community helps us stay accountable – Wolf's friends keep him grounded
The difference between regret and nostalgia – Missing your old life doesn't mean it was better
After the movie, ask your kids: "What's something good that's hard for you to keep doing every day?" Maybe it's being kind to a sibling, telling the truth, or doing homework without complaining. Connect Wolf's struggle to their own daily decisions to follow what's right.
The Verdict: Worth Your Family's Time
The Bad Guys 2 isn't perfect theology wrapped in animation, but it's a surprisingly thoughtful exploration of lasting change that most Christian films don't even attempt. It acknowledges the reality of spiritual warfare without naming it. It shows the cost of discipleship without preaching it.
For families looking for clean entertainment that opens doors for real conversations about character, transformation, and daily obedience, this sequel delivers. Your kids will enjoy the animation and humor. You'll appreciate the deeper message about what it means to truly change: and stay changed.
Plus, at a 4-star Christian safety rating, you can actually relax during family movie night instead of keeping one hand on the remote ready to fast-forward.
Final Recommendation
See it. Take your kids. Talk about it afterward. Use Wolf's journey as a springboard for discussions about their own daily choices to follow what's right.
Because at the end of the day, that's what we're all doing: waking up each morning and deciding again to take up our cross, deny ourselves, and follow Jesus. Even when nobody's watching. Even when it's not exciting. Even when we miss our old lives.
That's the real story of transformation. And The Bad Guys 2 tells it surprisingly well.
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