Tim Allen, John Travolta, Martin Lawrence, William H. Macy
The leather is tighter, the joints are stiffer, but the asphalt still burns with the fire of rebellion. Wild Hogs 2: The Final Roar reignites the engines of the legendary suburban biker gang nearly two decades after they first traded their cubicles for the open road. Doug (Tim Allen), Woody (John Travolta), Bobby (Martin Lawrence), and Dudley (William H. Macy) find themselves facing a terrifying new enemy: the modern world. In an era of silent electric scooters and self-driving sedans, the Hogs realize they are becoming relics—and they aren’t going down without a fight.

Tim Allen returns as the high-strung Doug, desperately trying to keep the group’s morale as high as their cholesterol. Beside him, John Travolta brings a weathered but undeniable charismatic swagger back to Woody, who is now masking a vulnerable secret that gives this journey a deeper, more emotional stakes. Martin Lawrence is back in peak form, delivering side-splitting physical comedy as a man escaping the chaos of grandfatherhood, while William H. Macy once again steals the spotlight as the lovable, tech-clueless Dudley, who is hilariously determined to become a “viral influencer” by any means necessary.

The quest is simple: one last cross-country trek to the legendary Sturgis Motorcycle Rally for their “Hall of Fame” induction. But the highway isn’t what it used to be. The Hogs find themselves hunted not by rugged outlaws, but by “The Streamers”—a pack of Gen-Z bikers who ride high-performance electric superbikes and care more about their “likes” than their lives.

It is a battle of Old School Chrome vs. New Tech Silicon in a journey packed with chaotic crashes, accidental nursing home heists, and high-speed chases involving mobility scooters. Heartfelt, outrageous, and unapologetically loud, The Final Roar is a tribute to the bond of brotherhood and the roar of a gas-guzzling engine. The Hogs might need reading glasses to find the map, but they’re about to show the world that legends don’t fade away—they just get louder.