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Hot Tub Time Machine 2 Poster

Hot Tub Time Machine 2

The laws of space and time are about to be violated.
2015 | 93m | English

(43794 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Steve Pink
Writer: Josh Heald
Staring:
Details

After their first adventure with the Hot Tub Time Machine, Lou and Nick are living very well off their ill-gotten gains, while Jacob still cannot rely on Lou to be a positive role model. When an unknown assailant breaks into Lou's mansion and shoots him, Nick and Jacob take him for another trip in the hot tub. They emerge in the year 2025, where they must figure out who shot Lou and prevent it from happening again.
Release Date: Feb 20, 2015
Director: Steve Pink
Writer: Josh Heald
Genres: Comedy
Keywords time travel, virtual reality, time machine, hallucinogen, sequel, hot tub, drinking, duringcreditsstinger, binge drinking, change the past
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $64,800,000
Budget: $36,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Rob Corddry Lou
Craig Robinson Nick
Clark Duke Jacob
Bianca Haase Sophie
Chevy Chase Repairman
Gillian Jacobs Jill
Collette Wolfe Kelly
Adam Scott Adam Jr.
Kumail Nanjiani Brad
Kellee Stewart Courtney
Josh Heald Terry
Gretchen Koerner Susan
Lisa Loeb Self
Jessica Williams Self
Bruce Buffer Self
Mariana Paola Vicente Shot Girl
Christian Slater Choozy Doozy Host
Jason Jones Gary Winkle
Olivia Jordan Bridesmaid
Christine Bently Christine
Stacey Asaro Excited Girl
Adam Herschman J-Bird
Kisha Sierra Bridesmaid
John Cusack Adam (uncredited)
Jason R.A. Foster DJ
Name Job
Steve Pink Director
Spencer Davison Set Designer
Ben Ormand Unit Production Manager
Declan Quinn Director of Photography
Jason Salzman Production Coordinator
Tim Cohn Set Decoration
Remi Savva Makeup Department Head
Korey Budd Production Supervisor
Gabriel J. Serrano Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Randall Guth Sound Effects Editor
Michael Applebaum Camera Operator
Steve Griffen Music Editor, Music Supervisor
Mark Karavite Steadicam Operator
Michael Hilkene Supervising Sound Editor
Kelly Cantley-Kashima First Assistant Director
Jamie Gross Editor
Ryan Berg Production Design
Nicole Garcea Script Supervisor
Carol Cutshall Costume Design, Costume Designer
Voni Hinkle Hair Department Head
Jason Baldwin Stewart Art Direction
Michael B. Koff Production Sound Mixer
Steve Dietl Still Photographer
Paul Olinde Gaffer
Matt Fausak Music Editor
Shonta T. McCray Costume Supervisor
Joe Waistell First Assistant Camera
John Karnay Additional Writing
Allison Gordin Makeup Artist
Annabelle MacNeal Makeup Artist
Carl G. Variste Hairstylist
Scott C. Bivona Greensman
Daniel Coe Construction Coordinator
Daina Daigle Hairstylist
Darryl Lucas Makeup Artist
Marina Savva Makeup Artist
Caleb Guillotte Art Department Coordinator
Brendan Turrill Set Designer
Matthew Armstrong Boom Operator
Joseph Payo Visual Effects Coordinator
Ulyan Atamanyuk Best Boy Electric
Brad Garris Best Boy Electric
Spencer Wilcox Dolly Grip
Catherine Rodi Seamstress
John A. Johnston Location Manager
Monty L. Simons Utility Stunts, Stunts
Sonia L. Garcia Painter
Pat A. O'Connor Leadman
Brook Yeaton Property Master
Matt Kutcher Special Effects Supervisor
Rocco Passionino Visual Effects Supervisor
Chris Roff Visual Effects Producer
Chris Ekstrom Key Grip
Kendell Joseph Dolly Grip
Sarah P. Koeppe Key Costumer
Giselle Spence Seamstress
Gail Marks Production Controller
Josh Heald Writer, Characters
Christophe Beck Original Music Composer
Susie Farris Casting
Gary C. Bourgeois Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Chuck Picerni Jr. Stunt Coordinator
Tarik Naim Alherimi Rigging Gaffer
Josh King First Assistant Director
Eunha Choi Title Designer
Eric Roberts Special Effects Coordinator
Victoria Sampson Dialogue Editor
Charlie Picerni Stunts
Name Title
Adam Blum Associate Producer
Ben Ormand Executive Producer
Matt Moore Executive Producer
Andrew Panay Producer
Rob Corddry Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 19 29 13
2024 5 23 32 12
2024 6 19 30 11
2024 7 29 62 10
2024 8 17 30 11
2024 9 15 24 10
2024 10 24 56 11
2024 11 15 30 9
2024 12 15 20 10
2025 1 16 23 12
2025 2 12 25 3
2025 3 6 19 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 2 3 1
2025 6 2 3 1
2025 7 2 3 1
2025 8 2 4 1
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 3 4 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 896 931
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 970 970
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 902 902

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Reviews

Frank Ochieng
N/A

At one point you could actually find some ounce of redeeming quality in the original ‘Hot Tub Time Machine’ where the movie demonstrated its playful foolishness for unexpected thoughtful insight involving a bunch of weary dudes in stagnation with their sub par lives. The gimmick of an unlikely hot t ... ub magically transporting these silly-minded saps back in time when their youthful existences were fun and carefree that meant something in contrast to the nowadays malaise that plagues them actually had merit, to a certain point of course. Gleefully, the art of discovering the inner man-child mentality was a cockeyed challenge in ‘Hot Tub Time Machine 2′ . This is not to say that the original ‘Hot Tub’ was without its transparent banality. Still, it at least had a wacky purpose of over-the-top observation in mindless men looking to get back into the boundless craziness of their early years of arrested development. Well, in the tradition of inevitable practice of sequelitis comes the monotonous ‘Hot Tub Time Machine 2’…a blatant excuse to heighten and celebrate whatever remaining applauded lunacy the predecessor had in making its misguided mark the first time around. Relentlessly pointless, tasteless and desperately attention-getting, this second serving of ‘Hot Tub ‘overflows its witless waters with jerky Jacuzzi-style humor so uninspired in lukewarm laughter that you might consider drowning yourself to save the agony of its time-traveling tepidness. The tone in the first ‘Hot Tub Time Machine’ wanted to take a jittery joyride in reshaping the doldrums of these present-day morons and whisking them back to the mid-1980s where they can discover their fratboy fantasies as an escape route. Now, director Steve Pink returns to the splashy scene-of-the-crime as his tacky time-traveling hipsters want to engage in more naughty-minded brushes with eccentric personalities and places. The second time revisiting this anemic ‘Back To The Future’-esque formula finds the hot tub hotshots ten years into the future as they have taken advantage of exploiting their experiences through time travel. Yippee for them! Screenwriter Josh Heald’s lame story never taps into the freshened fervor of the magical hot tub or its band of traveling hucksters as the movie buries itself in arbitrary, manic messiness. ‘Hot Tub Time Machine 2′ has really nothing to say or contribute to its empty-minded nuttiness. If you are game for gawking at bouncy babes (okay, this is not altogether a bad thing to endure), tolerating varied penis-style jokes, being exposed to tired time-traveling gags and fussing over the presence of an assassin on the lurk then jumping into this particular installment of ‘Hot Tub’ will warm your stillborn funnybone. Otherwise, the rest of us will probably prefer to blow bubbles out of chlorine pool water. The ‘Hot Tub Time Machine’ rabble-rousers are back in this sorry sequel sans top-billed star John Cusack (Cusack’s Adam Yates character is missing from the proceedings, a lucky timed absence for both Cusack and his alter ego). So the floor belongs completely to the other players in Rob Corddry’s Lou, Craig Robinson’s Nick and Clark Duke’s Jacob. Together, they all capitalise on their hot tub-related hubris and profit fabulously in their money-making ventures. Lou’s creation of the Internet search engine “Lougle” (yeah, a festive take-off on Google) has made him a bundle of cash. For Nick, his star-power as a musician (based on the creative back’s of the other artists he stole from) has landed him comfortable pop cultural status. Jacob, who we learned was Lou’s son previously, is piggybacking off of Lou’s online business success as his personal servant. When an assassin decides to rub out Lou (he is shot in the private parts…there you go…the ready-made juvenile wee-wee fodder in gear), the guys decide to go back to their trusty hot tub to take them back and curtail the assassin’s deed but that is to no avail. Instead, Lou, Nick and Jacob are thrust ten years into the future. The question remains: can the time-traveling trio catch the would-be assassin? How come one gets the sudden urge to automatically root for the killer-at-large? Sure, the criticisms lodged towards anyone that will rail against the intentional nonsense of ‘Hot Tub Time Machine 2’s will be inevitable. ‘Hey idiot… the ‘Hot Tub Time Machin’e flicks are not suppose to win Oscars so stop being so fussy and overly critical.’ Okay, duly noted. Still, regurgitating a comical time machine romp back in 2010 that was questionable to begin with as it tries to mine the same kind of hackneyed hilarity leaves something to be desired. The gross-out nature of the smirking showcase lacks heft and feels woefully childish. The whole affair screams volumes of strain and desperation as Pink wants the forced lewd laughs to settle as opposed to trying to present a rollicking narrative that actually presents a sense of zany adventure without leaning on its noxious fumes. For the sheer sake of being sophomoric and obnoxiously outlandish, ‘Hot Tub Time Machine 2′ struggles mightily in trying to plant a guilt pleasure grin on one’s face. Sadly, there are plenty that will be receptive to this lazy and raucous time-traveling tripe with the transparent titillation. Hot Tub Time Travel Machine 2 (2015) Paramount Pictures 93 mins. Starring: Rob Cordday, Craig Robinson, Clark Duke, Chevy Chase, Adam Scott and Collette Wolfe Directed by: Steve Pink MPAA Rating: R Genre: Comedy & Fantasy/Time Travel Adventure Critic’s rating: * star (out of 4 stars)

May 16, 2024
Rangan
5.0

**Landing in a wrong timeline!** Feels like 2010 was a long ago, so I don't remember the first film much. Looks like it is an unnecessary sequel, particularly when a very important character goes missing. Even the first film was not great, though that was considered a mainstream film and this one ... slipped into the B category. An average story, the theme was not used properly. I'm not talking about the plot holes, but the story construction and its characters. The old friends meet again after becoming famous and millionaires, but when one of them met an accident, they decide to go back in time to fix it. Instead, they enter a wrong timeline and from there how they get back is what revealed in the remaining narration. The comedies were okay types, but I expected a better one. The twist was very ordinary, for a time travel theme people anticipates a smart twist, but it fell short to stand up to the mark. Whatever, the production was awesome, all the special effects were acceptable. I mean it did not strongly relied on them, but according to the story's requirement, it managed so well. Less entertainment, but very much watchable and suits as a timepass product. I think the scenes at the end credits are for fun, but it also looks like a hint for possible third film. I'm not against that idea, but if it has a good story and upgraded cast like maybe new ones, I surely look forward. _4.5/10_

May 16, 2024