Some treasures grant power. Others demand a price. The Medallion 2 (2026) brings Jackie Chan’s cult action-fantasy back to life, fusing his trademark martial arts brilliance with mystical stakes that reach far beyond the first film. This time, the medallion isn’t just a gift of immortality—it’s a curse tied to a force that refuses to stay buried.

The story begins years after Eddie Yang’s (Jackie Chan) first encounter with the medallion’s power. Though blessed with strength and agility beyond any mortal, Eddie has lived with the burden of immortality—watching friends grow old, his body never failing, his soul never at rest. Just as he begins to wonder if the medallion’s blessing is truly a curse, a new threat rises: a secret order determined to reforge the medallion’s power into a weapon capable of enslaving the world.
At its heart, The Medallion 2 is about sacrifice. Eddie must decide whether to protect the medallion’s secret or destroy it forever, even if it means giving up the only thing that sets him apart. His journey becomes less about what the medallion can give him, and more about what it has taken away.

The villain is ruthless: a warlord-turned-mystic who believes the medallion holds the key to godhood. With an army of mercenaries and sorcerers at his side, he pursues Eddie across the globe—Hong Kong, Istanbul, and the mist-shrouded temples of Tibet—leaving chaos in his wake.
The action is vintage Jackie Chan, blending gravity-defying stunts with comedic timing and bone-crunching martial arts. From rooftop chases across neon-lit skylines to duels inside collapsing temples, the film delivers both spectacle and humor. Every fight tells a story, showcasing Eddie’s wit and resilience as much as his fists.
Supporting characters enrich the adventure: Eddie’s old allies return, now older and wiser, while a young protégé challenges him to see the medallion’s legacy in a new light. Their banter and bonds provide warmth, ensuring the story remains as heartfelt as it is action-packed.

Visually, the film dazzles with mystical spectacle. The medallion glows with eerie energy, temples crumble under storms of fire, and dreamlike visions reveal the medallion’s ancient origin. Each set piece captures both wonder and peril.
The score mixes high-energy percussion with sweeping Eastern melodies, heightening the sense of myth and adventure. In moments of quiet reflection, softer themes echo the melancholy of Eddie’s immortality.
Thematically, The Medallion 2 asks: is eternal life a blessing, or the heaviest curse? Eddie’s struggle transforms the medallion from a trinket of power into a symbol of sacrifice, reminding us that the true measure of a hero is not in how long he lives, but in what he chooses to fight for.
By its finale, Eddie faces his greatest choice yet: to wield the medallion one last time, or to let it go forever. The decision reshapes not just his destiny, but the balance between humanity and the mystical world.
Ultimately, The Medallion 2 (2026) is Jackie Chan at his most mythic: thrilling, funny, and unexpectedly poignant. It delivers the dazzling stunts fans crave while giving the medallion’s legend a deeper, more emotional resonance. Power fades, but sacrifice endures—and legends, like Jackie, never truly die.