Ne Zha 2
Ne Zha 2 is a 2025 Chinese animated fantasy adventure film written and directed by Jiaozi based on the Chinese mythological character and Xu Zhonglin's 16th-century novel Investiture of the Gods. It is the direct sequel to Ne Zha. The film takes up the story of Chinese mythological character Ne Zha and his friend Ao Bing. After a sacrifice, only Ne Zha's body can be recreated, although he carries Ao Bing's spirit within. Ne Zha calls on this spirit in his fight against Master Shen.
Ne Zha 2 was released in theaters across China on 29 January 2025, coinciding with the first day of the Chinese New Year. Like its predecessor, the film received highly positive reviews from critics, and achieved even greater commercial success at a gross of $2.2 billion worldwide against a production budget of US$80 million. Ne Zha 2 broke numerous box office records inside and outside China, including becoming the highest-grossing film in a single box office territory, the highest-grossing animated film, being the first adult animated film in this position, the highest-grossing non-English language film and the first animated film in history to cross the $2 billion mark, as well as being the highest-selling animated film based on ticket sales, overtaking The Lion King. It also became the highest-grossing film of 2025 and the fifth-highest-grossing film of all time.
Plot
After Ne Zha and Ao Bing are struck by godly lightning together, their bodies are destroyed. To prevent their souls from dying, Master Taiyi Zhenren exhausts his Seven-Colored Sacred Lotus to regenerate their physical bodies, though they are still fragile. Ao Bing's father, Ao Guang, the Dragon King of the East Sea, believing his son is dead, orders Master Shen Gongbao to attack Chentang Pass with the demons imprisoned under his palace and the other three Dragon Kings of the Four Seas. Ao Bing defends Chentang Pass, but his new body disintegrates due to the effort exerted.Ao Guang makes a ceasefire deal: Ao Bing and Ne Zha will share Ne Zha's body for seven days, complete three trials to become a xian and win a potion that can restore the Sacred Lotus and create a new body for Ao Bing, upon which Ao Guang's forces will retreat. The trials are set by Immortal Wuliang, leader of the heavenly Chan sect. During the trials, candidates complete missions while supervised by Wuliang's disciples. These missions are normally performed by the sect's demon hunters.
Ne Zha takes sleeping pills to hide his demon nature during the trials, allowing Ao Bing to fully control his body temporarily. Together, Ne Zha and Ao Bing complete the first two trials: defeating a village of marmot demons and a master who trains demons to prepare for the xian trials, respectively.
In the meantime, Ao Guang tasks Shen Gongbao with guarding the Chentang Pass. Gongbao is temporarily reunited with his younger brother Shen Xiaobao. Xiaobao then witnesses Ne Zha's second trial where the master Shen Zhengdao who is the Shen family's patriarch, is violently captured by the sect's forces. He returns to tell Gongbao of the sect's siege and plunder of their family's village before dying from the injuries he gained from Wuliang's disciple Deero.
Before Ne Zha sets off on his third trial, he is informed that Chentang Pass was destroyed. Enraged, Ne Zha completes the third trial without Ao Bing's help, defeating the stone spirit Shi Ji becoming xian and obtaining the potion. While Taiyi restores the Sacred Lotus with the potion and regenerates Ao Bing's body, Ne Zha joins Wuliang's forces to trap the dragons in Wuliang's giant cauldron, planning to forge the dragons and demons into elixirs. However, the other three dragon kings turn against Ao Guang by collaborating with Wuliang to escape the cauldron.
Li Jing and Lady Yin arrive at the cauldron unharmed with Ao Bing and Taiyi to explain the truth. They reveal that Wuliang ordered the destruction of Chentang Pass, not the dragons. In a flashback, Shen deduces the dragon kings' betrayal and involvement in the massacre. The Chan sect wanted to frame Ao Guang for the attack to destroy the dragons and ensure the heavenly sect's domination. Nezha's parents escaped the destruction as Shen took a last stand to defend the city.
The two parties battle until Wuliang casts Ne Zha's group into the cauldron. As the heat of the cauldron rises, the prisoners are transformed into elixirs, including Lady Yin. A grieving Ne Zha absorbs the cauldron's samadhi fire, solidifying his new body, and thus is reborn. Alongside the dragons and demons, Ne Zha and Ao Bing break the cauldron and force the heavenly armies to retreat. In the aftermath, Ao Guang leads the remaining dragons into hiding somewhere in the sea, with the exception of Ao Bing, who stays behind to help Ne Zha expose Wuliang's nature.
In a mid-credits scene, Wuliang heads to a secret prison to negotiate with the captive Shen Gongbao and Shen Zhengdao, hoping to recruit them, only to be trapped after cursing a warden to sleep for mocking his injuries and the fact that his registered injuries have healed. Ne Zha's older xian brothers Jinzha and Muzha are summoned to meet with Wuliang, but cannot find him when they arrive. Deero and Crana work to get Wuliang's injuries back to match the registered picture.
Voice cast
Additional English dub voices by Aidyn Ahn, Steve Allerick, Eric Bauza, Brook Chalmers, David Cui Cui, Richard Epcar, Damien Haas, Erika Ishii, Aaron LaPlante, Grace Lu, Candi Milo, Vincent Rodriguez III, Sean Rohani, Fred Tatasciore, Kari Wahlgren, Michael Yurchak, and Rick ZieffProduction
Before the release of Ne Zha, director Jiaozi said that the production team intended to develop a sequel if the film performed well at the box office. Ne Zha was commercially successful, and five days after it was released, the production team stated that a sequel was in development. The sequel was named "Nezha: The demon child churns the sea", or Ne Zha 2 in English. For this movie, the total cost for production reached 600 million yuan, breaking the 200 million yuan record of [Deep Sea |Deep Sea] to become China's most expensive animated film. The film was also supported by Sichuan Province's funds for major cultural projects, which have an annual budget of 300 million yuan.Ne Zha and Ne Zha 2 each took five years to produce. More than 4,000 people across 138 animation companies participated in the creation of the film, more than double the 1,600 people in the first film. Producer Liu Wenzhang said that the number of characters in this film is three times that of the previous film, which had more than 1,800 shots, while the sequel had more than 2,400 shots, including more than 1,900 special effects shots.
A documentary, Bùpò-bùlì was released online on 10 February 2025, which describes the process of making Ne Zha 2.
Character design
The character design in the film had been upgraded from the original designs. For the human characters, a layer of white fur was added to their faces to make them appear more natural and realistic.Director Jiaozi hoped that all the characters in this film would incorporate elements of Chinese aesthetics. The design of the character "Deer Child" combines elements related to deer, with the patterns on their clothing inspired by traditional folk jade carving art. For the East Sea Dragon King Ao Guang, the production team initially planned to reference the image of the fierce and brutish Prince Kang from the 1992 film Royal Tramp. However, after listening to audience feedback, they decided to change it to a more mature image. Ao Guang's costume, the Dragon Scale Armor, features traditional Chinese tattoo-style dragon patterns to convey a sense of heaviness and strength, aligning with his "lofty" image. Additionally, the design of the "Lingzhu Version Nezha" character pays homage to the image of Nezha from the 1979 Shanghai Animation Film Studio animated feature Nezha Conquers the Dragon King.
The designs of the secondary characters, the underwater demon beasts, were inspired by early Chinese depictions of mythical creatures, incorporating features such as curved tusks, typical of Eastern monsters, which differ from Western monster imagery. To make each demon beast unique, their skin blends various materials, including fish scales and the skin of elephants, crocodiles and turtles.
Difference with the original novel
Although the films are based on the 16th-century Chinese novel Investiture of the Gods, the production team made significant changes and incorporated family and friendship elements, resulting in differences between the films and the original novel. In a sense, it is its own story featuring the mythological figure Nezha as the protagonist based on the assumption that the mythological character Nezha is the reincarnation of a demon. The Chinese original name of this series includes the word "Mo Tong". To distinguish it from other works featuring Nezha as the protagonist, sometimes the series are also known as "Demon Child" or "Demon Child: Ne Zha" in China.In the original work, there is no concept of Chaos Pearl and Demon Orb. Ne Zha was the reincarnation of Spirit Pearl. However, he was portrayed as a naïve child with strong murderous intent, this became the inspiration for setting it as a demon reincarnation in this series. In the original work, one of Ne Zha's main deeds included randomly killing Ao Bing, the third son of the Dragon King of East Sea, and intimidating the Dragon King who was preparing to go to heaven to file a complaint. As a result, the Dragon King of the East Sea led the other Dragon Kings to threaten to slaughter Chentang Pass. Nezha had to commit suicide to quell the situation, but later resurrected with the help of his master Taiyi Zhenren. His also has a difficult relationship with his parents. His father Li Jing once obstructed his resurrection, which caused Nezha to become enraged and tried to hunt down and kill Li Jing after resurrection.
In addition, the main antagonist in this film, Master Xian Wuliang, and supporting characters such as Shen Xiaobao, are all original characters, and do not exist in the Investiture of the Gods.
Music
The film's music, which was composed by Wan Pin Chu, Rui Yang and Roc Chen combines orchestra-style scoring recorded at the Vienna Synchron Stage in Vienna with traditional folk music from the various regions in China. The cue for the Tianyuan Ding slowly sinking is Mongol Tuvan throat singing; the final battle combines suona and orchestral instruments. In addition, in order to express different scenes and characters, the film also uses pipa, xiao, Tianjin folk art tunes, thumb piano, Peking opera gongs and drums, Baroque instruments, synthesizers, and erhu, among other instruments. The opening passage adopts the [Kam people#Culture|Grand song of the Dong ethnic group], which was inscribed on the UNESCO [Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists|UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage List] since 2009. It is performed by ensemble Wuyue Chan'ge, which consists of ten Dong women from Qiandongnan, Guizhou.Marketing
On 7 January 2025, the film's first trailer was released. A second trailer was released on 26 January 2025.Release
Theatrical
On 10 December 2024, the film was officially announced. It was released in mainland China on 29 January 2025 in 2D, 3D, IMAX, CINITY, CGS, Dolby Cinema, 4DX and other formats. The film was released in Australia, New Zealand, and other countries on 13 February 2025; in the United States and Canada on 14 February; and in Hong Kong and Macau on 22 February. In Southeast Asia, the film releases on dates ranging from 6 March to 21 March with Encore Films handling distribution in Singapore and co-distributed with Warner Bros. Pictures in the rest of Southeast Asia. The film's opening date in the UK and Ireland was on 21 March, following previews on 14 March, by Trinity CineAsia. Additional European markets including France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Benelux and Scandinavian territories, are set to follow soon afterwards, and opening date for Japan is scheduled for 4 April. Encore Films and Warner Bros. Discovery India announced its Indian theatrical release on 25 April.The film's English dub was released in the United States on 22 August 2025 by A24, with Michelle Yeoh leading a new cast of voice actors including Crystal Lee, Griffin Puatu, Aleks Le, Vincent Rodriguez III, Rick Zeiff, and William Utay among others.
Home media
The film began streaming on Chinese online streaming platforms from 2 August 2025. A24 released the English dub of the film for VOD on 16 September 2025.Reception
Box office
In three days after its release in China, the film's box office reached 1.1 billion yuan, the first movie to reach 1 billion yuan at the box office during the Chinese New Year in 2025. On the fourth day of release, the box office exceeded 2 billion yuan. On the fifth day of release, it exceeded 3 billion yuan. It exceeded 4 billion yuan on only the sixth day of release, breaking the record for the fastest to reach 4 billion yuan set by Detective Chinatown 3 in 2021. The box office exceeded 5 billion on the eighth day of release, breaking the record of 5 billion set by The Battle at Lake Changjin, the box office champion in mainland China in 2021, and surpassed the total box office of the first Ne Zha film, becoming the highest grossing animated film in mainland China. The Ne Zha film series also became the second film series to exceed 10 billion yuan with just two movies, and the box office exceeded 6 billion on the ninth day of release.As of 8 February 2025, the box office has exceeded 7.2 billion yuan, ranking first in the Chinese New Year period, surpassing Wolf Warrior 2 and The Battle at Lake Changjin to become the highest-grossing Chinese film of all time. On 8 February, the box office exceeded 7 billion yuan, becoming the 63rd film to cross the 7 billion yuan mark worldwide, and the first non-Hollywood film to do so. It also surpassed the List of highest-grossing films in the [United States and Canada|single territory box office record] of US$936.7 million set by Star Wars: The Force Awakens, 11 days into its release. It became the highest-grossing animated film, surpassing Inside Out 2 in less than three weeks after its initial release. It marks the first non-American, non-English-language animated film to achieve this milestone and the second non-Disney animated film to be labeled as such after Shrek 2. Ne Zha 2 passed the $2 billion mark on 9 March 2025, becoming the first animated and non-American film to have done so, and the seventh overall.
At its premiere in Los Angeles on 12 February, Grauman's Chinese Theatre sold out of tickets immediately upon release. The film grossed $7.2 million in its opening weekend in the United States, compared with its predecessor's $1.2 million opening weekend there.
Released in Singapore on 6 March, the film earned $300,000 Singapore dollars on its first day. By the seventh day of release, the box office had surpassed $2.5 million Singapore dollars, breaking the records for the highest first-day and total box office earnings for a Chinese film in Singapore. On 29 March, the distributor, Clover Films, announced on social media that the total box office in Singapore had exceeded $6 million Singapore dollars.
Critical response
China
Red Star News praised its special effects, script, and concept, and said that the film "uses a solid script and accurate expression of values, proving that 'respect for the audience' is the real box office password." Shangguan News praised the film for continuing the style and rhythm of the previous film, and the further improvement of the battle and special effects scenes, but criticized the lack of suspense in the plot.The Macau Post Daily published an interview with Harald Brüning about the film. He commented:
Western
, earning it the "Certified Fresh" seal.Danae Stahlnecker of Common Sense Media gave the film four stars out of five, saying: "stunning animated action adventure is an inspiring, heart-wrenching tale about how we all have the power to change our circumstances and make a better world." She praised the characters and story, and she concluded "Refreshingly, this sequel isn't just a franchise cash-grab. It's a thoughtful, well-crafted installment in an ongoing epic that deserves its global success."
Audience response
Ne Zha 2 was widely praised by Chinese audiences. Douban Movies scored the film 8.4/10, and the film also had an average rating of 9.7 out of 10 on Maoyan and 9.8 out of 10 on Taopiaopiao. The Atlantic, quoting Jenny Zhang of Slate, noted the wide range in reception from Chinese audiences.Impact
The film's overwhelming success was widely noted by a variety of media outlets as unprecedented for Chinese and non-Hollywood cinema, several noting its implications for the movie industry as a whole. Many noted the success for the film was due to a variety of factors, such as fanfare and anticipation from fans due to the first film, its release timing around the holiday, word of mouth from the general public, and pride over the development and subsequent successes of Chinese animated blockbusters over the years, as exemplified by recent films such as Monkey King: Hero Is Back, Big Fish & Begonia, White Snake, Ne Zha, Jiang Ziya, I [Am What I Am |I Am What I Am], Deep Sea, Chang'an ''Boonie Bears: Time Twist and Nobody. After the film was released, its box office continued to rise due to excellent word of mouth. Many took to social media to voice that it was difficult to get tickets to the film. Netizens took to the producers' social media to call for more showings to be scheduled to meet the audience's viewing needs. In some areas, midnight showings were completely full, which was noted as a rare phenomenon.The success of Ne Zha 2 led several commentators calling it a milestone for international cinema. Many netizens took to social media to voice pride for the film's success. Simultaneously, the film inspired direct comparisons between it and Captain America: Brave New World, which was released in China around the same time. The latter's negative word-of-mouth from ticket buyers on ticketing websites caused it to massively decline in box office performance in the country. The dissident website China Digital Times claims that negative articles and reporting toward Ne Zha 2 have been heavily censored in mainland China.
, less than two percent of ticket sales had come outside mainland China with the movie's opening in five markets. Ne Zha 2'' has seen particular popularity among the Chinese diaspora in various countries such as Australia, New Zealand, and North America. It was reported the film inspired New Zealand viewers to visit China, with many lauding the film's presentation and depictions of Chinese culture.
Due to the film's box office performance, the film's producer and distributor, Enlight Media, saw its shares rise by the daily limit after the Chinese New Year.