Despite an engaging opening that promises to deepen the world already established in 2018's Bird Box, this new installment slips back into the usual routine before long. That is: cheap thrills and an overall lack of scares, not necessarily because of the fact that the creatures terrorizing this world are invisible, but because the film doesn't take advantage of the fear and paranoia that builds among the human characters. A stronger focus on religious belief (or simply blind fanaticism) should lead to more interesting character dynamics, but there isn't a single person here who's defined by anything beyond a few base traits. So despite the efforts of a game cast (including Babylon's Diego Calva and especially Barbarian's Georgina Campbell), the film just can't overcome how boring it is to watch blindfolded people reacting to nothing.
Synopsis
After a mysterious force decimates the world’s population, Sebastian must navigate his own survival journey through the desolate streets of Barcelona. As he forms uneasy alliances with other survivors and they try to escape the city, an unexpected and even more sinister threat grows.
Storyline
A new group of survivors, this time in Barcelona, tries to survive the same entities that compel people to kill themselves—while one among the group secretly plots to sacrifice the others.
TLDR
Like playing Among Us on an international server, but nowhere near as insane.
What stands out
It isn't a spoiler to say that Georgina Campbell's Claire—an English woman who gets stranded in Barcelona when the entities attack—isn't the protagonist, but she probably should've been. Campbell already proved how well she works within the horror genre through last year's surprise horror hit Barbarian, and her work in Bird Box Barcelona also helps elevate the film to another level of urgency. So it's a shame that the movie gives her (and the rest of the cast) so little to do. Actual lead actor Mario Casas puts in strong work as well, but it's Campbell who you really end up rooting for.