
The end of the world was just the beginning. Now, survival is the destination. Premiering April 24 exclusively on Lionsgate Play, Greenland 2: Migration takes audiences deeper into a gripping post-apocalyptic journey where resilience, family, and the search for safety collide. Picking up after the catastrophic comet event, the Garrity family leaves the safety of Greenland’s bunkers to embark on a perilous migration across a devastated world in search of a new home.
About Greenland 2
Led by Gerard Butler, Morena Baccarin, and Roman Griffin Davis, the film expands its emotional core while raising the stakes with new characters, unexpected alliances, and escalating dangers. As the world struggles to rebuild, the Garritys must navigate treacherous landscapes and human conflict, making impossible choices that test their strength and unity.
Thrilling, emotional, and visually spectacular, Greenland 2: Migration goes beyond disaster storytelling. Backed by raw performances and relentless tension, it strips survival down to its core, forcing its characters to confront not just how to live, but what’s still worth living for—making for a compelling watch.
Gerard Butler on the movie
Talking about the theme and legacy of the Greenland franchise, Gerard Butler shared, “In terms of the idea—that we are stronger in numbers and as a team, and the more we stick together in these times. If we look at the world now, as we are coming out of COVID, which may in some ways represent people emerging into a world that is far more complicated than it was a few years ago, with a lot more going on that we have to navigate and fight through. Just the idea of hope, holding on to hope and being able to cling on, and to not deal with things in isolation but to come together as much as we can.”
Adding further, he said, “And as John and Alison did in the first movie, seeing past their squabbles and all their issues with each other, they realised that in terms of the larger meaning of this world, it meant nothing. I hope that it`s part of this legacy, and perhaps in realising that this world is more vulnerable than we think it is and that we have to take care of it. Perhaps it`s an insight into another reality that we are lucky not to have experienced yet, and one we must work hard to avoid.”






