Ratings: 7.3/10
Runtime: 1h 50min
Genres: Drama
Director: Andrew Erwin, Brent Mccorkle
Writer: Brent Mccorkle
Cast: Sophie Skelton, Arielle Kebbel, Mark Furze
Language: English
I Can Only Imagine 2 doesn’t coast on faith—it wrestles with it. Directed by Andrew Erwin and Brent McCorkle, the film opens quiet, almost fragile. Then it cracks. A life rebuilt starts to splinter again. Meanwhile, the past hangs close, like breath on glass. The camera lingers on small things—shaking hands, damp eyes, worn guitars. However, the story refuses easy comfort, Pain stays, It echoes. The performances feel lived-in, not polished. A voice strains mid-song Then it steadies. Moreover, the music doesn’t just swell—it presses, low and heavy, like it has something to prove. You feel the cost behind every lyric. Is redemption ever clean? Not here. Instead, it comes messy, with doubt creeping in between quiet prayers. Therefore, every moment of hope lands harder than expected. Some scenes stretch, sure—but they earn it. Ultimately, this sequel hits deeper than it should . It aches, then heals, then aches again. Streaming now on afdah tv, it doesn’t just ask you to believe it dares you to.