HERCULES 2

HERCULES 2: THE FALL OF OLYMPUS (2026)
Starring: Dwayne Johnson, Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell, Reece Ritchie
Years have passed since the legendary battles that forged the name of Hercules into myth. After the fall of tyrants and the salvation of kingdoms, the demigod once known as the greatest warrior of Greece has disappeared from the world’s stage. Some say he sought peace. Others say he simply grew tired of being used by kings and gods alike. But legends never truly fade—they wait for the moment the world needs them again.
In HERCULES 2: THE FALL OF OLYMPUS (2026), that moment arrives when an ancient relic—long forbidden by the gods themselves—is uncovered deep beneath the ruins of a forgotten temple. The artifact carries a power older than Olympus, a fragment of the primordial forces that existed before the gods ruled the heavens. When it is awakened, the balance between divine power and mortal fate shatters instantly.

Across the world, the consequences unfold with terrifying speed. The ancient Titans—beings of raw, destructive power who once ruled before Zeus and the Olympians—begin to stir in their long-forgotten prisons. Earthquakes shake sacred mountains. Storms rage across the seas. Temples once devoted to the gods collapse as faith turns to fear. Olympus itself, once a symbol of divine order, begins to fracture as suspicion and ambition ignite a civil war among the gods.
Some deities believe the Titans must be destroyed before they can fully awaken. Others see an opportunity to seize ultimate power for themselves. Betrayals unfold within the golden halls of Olympus, and for the first time in centuries, the gods turn their wrath not only on each other—but on the fragile world of mortals below.
As chaos spreads across Greece, whispers of a forgotten hero begin to resurface. Hercules, the son of Zeus and a mortal woman, has long tried to escape the shadow of his divine heritage. Haunted by the wars he fought and the lives he lost, he chose exile rather than glory. But when the heavens themselves begin to crumble, even he cannot remain hidden forever.

Summoned by fate and necessity, Hercules reunites with the companions who once fought beside him. Amphiaraus (Ian McShane), the enigmatic seer whose visions often reveal truths others refuse to face, warns that the conflict between gods and Titans could destroy the world entirely. Autolycus (Rufus Sewell), the cunning rogue and master thief, joins the fight not for prophecy or honor, but because he understands that survival sometimes depends on choosing the right side at the right moment. And Iolaus (Reece Ritchie), Hercules’ loyal nephew and devoted ally, remains the one person who still believes the demigod can become the hero the world desperately needs.
Together, they embark on a perilous journey across a land consumed by mythic warfare. Crumbling temples become battlefields where monstrous creatures roam freely. Ancient fortresses fall beneath the fury of awakening Titans. The once-glorious cities of Greece tremble as mortals find themselves trapped in a war between beings far beyond their understanding.

Yet the greatest threat lies not among the Titans—but within Olympus itself. As Zeus’s authority begins to weaken, rival gods vie for control of the heavens. Power, once balanced by divine law, becomes a weapon wielded by ambition. Hercules realizes that defeating monsters alone will not save the world. The true battle lies in confronting the corruption that has infected the very gods meant to protect humanity.
The story builds toward an epic final confrontation atop Mount Olympus, where divine power collides with mortal determination. Thunder shakes the heavens, Titans rise from ancient prisons, and the fate of both gods and humans hangs in the balance. In the midst of the chaos stands Hercules—a warrior born between two worlds, forced to decide whether the age of the gods should continue… or finally come to an end.
For Hercules, strength has never been the true measure of a hero. Strength can break armies and crush monsters. But only willpower can challenge the heavens themselves.