6/10
This sequel to Free Willy doesn't stray far from its predecessor, but it actually is a stronger film on the whole despite some lingering shortcomings.
4 March 2023
Two years after the events of the previous film, Jesse (Jason James Richter) has settled in with his adoptive parents Glen and Annie Greenwood (Michael Madsen and Jayne Atkinson respectively) and is preparing for a camping trip with them to visit his friend Randolph (August Schellenberg) who has since taken a research position with the Orca institute and is now tracking Willy's pod in the San Juan Islands. The plans are interrupted when Jesse is visited by his social worker Dwight (Mykelti Williamson) who informs him that they've found his birth mother who's since passed on, but Jesse also has an 8-year-old half-brother, Elvis (Francis Capra), who is placed with the Greenwoods due to Jesse being his closest kin which Jesse is none too pleased about. As they adjust to Elvis' presence who has a similar abrasiveness to Jesse in addition to constant lies and exaggerations, Jesse happily reunites with Willy who still remembers him and is introduced to Willy's siblings Luna and Littlespot while also forming a friendship with Randolph's goddaughter Nadine (Mary Kate Schellhardt). However the happiness of the reunion is short lived when oil tanker Dakar runs aground near by causing an oil spill that leads to an ecological disaster that threatens Willy and his siblings and cuts them off from the rest of their pod.

Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home is of course the sequel to 1993's surprise hit Free Willy which despite opening if fifth place behind juggernauts like Jurassic Park was able to become a solid success thanks to strong holding power at the box office and a thrifty budget. Executive producers Richard and Lauren Schuler Donner made clear their intention to produce a sequel to the film a few months after the first one's release, and even renegotiated with star Jason James Richter giving him an increased salary with an option for a third film. Produced on a significantly larger budget and promoted as a big Summer movie, Free Willy 2 also opened modestly but unlike its predecessor didn't maintain the holds that allowed the first film to become a hit and the film only made $30 million domestically against its $31 million budget, significantly down from the $77 million its original brought in. Thanks to the international market the film managed to gross $68 million worldwide, and as movie studios were still riding high on the record profits yielded from home media sales of children's films Free Willy most likely generated a respectable profit once it hit home video. While the fact this movie exists is pretty standard "business as usual" sequelization, it's honestly a better movie than the first one in my opinion.

Much like the previous movie, the acting is really good with performers still giving committed performances even if the material isn't all that rich. While the Jesse character still hasn't had all of his more abrasive qualities dialed back it does feel like the filmmakers understood the flaws present in the character and made an attempt at showing the character in a manner where he exhibited more emotional intelligence and compassion rather than anger, spite, and sarcasm as he had done in the previous film. Jesse's relationship with the Greenwood's isn't much more substantive here than it was previously, but at least they share more positive interactions this time around. Francis Capra's portrayal of Elvis is one of those issues that like the previous film, lands more on the writing than the acting. While the movie sets up a rift between Jesse and Elvis they're supposed to overcome, it really doesn't feel like it is and the way the character is written to be as abrasive as Jesse was in the first film but with the added running trait of every other word he says being a brazen lie it makes it hard to sympathize with the character. Maybe this could have been addressed if they'd gone into more detail about Jesse and Elvis' mom and what actual issues she had but because this is the kind of movie it is we know it's not going to do that so Elvis is really only here to give the Greenwoods some reason to be in the story because if it weren't for Elvis they'd be bereft of things to do.

Unlike the original film that used a combination of a real whale and animatronics, Free Willy 2 uses fully animatronic whales for the three whales and for the most part they look pretty convincing and do the job well. The scenes where the film is evoking the Exxon Valdeez oil spill are quite harrowing and there's a sense of weight and investment to the film that features some impressive set pieces such as an oil fire in the third act. On paper it seems like a solid conflict but the movie also adds on a completely unnecessary tangent (I would say sub plot but it's honestly too thin to qualify for that) and we introduce some human antagonists who want to sell Willy and his siblings to aquariums and amusement parks and it feels unnecessary because A) in a disaster movie like this, the "disaster" is adequate as your main villain and B) it's just retreading subjects that were already covered by the first film and feel like unnecessary padding.

Free Willy 2 didn't need to exist and does fall mostly in line with what was done with the first film, but it does feel like a better movie on the whole thanks to dialing back some of the more abrasive aspects of Jesse's character and creating a legitimately engaging scenario. I did find myself hard pressed to like the Elvis character and the addition of unnecessary human antagonists to this story did feel like an unnecessary distraction but for the most part I did think Free Willy 2 was an okay movie that didn't overstay its welcome.
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