The trailer for Mama 2 (2025) begins with an eerie and unsettling atmosphere, immediately evoking the chilling tone of the first film. It opens with a shot of an old, dilapidated house surrounded by dense fog, deep in the woods. The camera slowly zooms in on a familiar scene: a broken swing creaking in the wind. Faint whispers and the distant sound of children laughing send shivers down the spine.
We hear the voice of Annabel (played again by Jessica Chastain), recounting the terrifying events that transpired years ago. “We thought it was over. We thought she was gone.” Her words are intercut with flashbacks to the terrifying ghost, Mama, and her obsessive attachment to the two orphaned girls, Lilly and Victoria.
However, peace is short-lived. The trailer shifts to present-day scenes, showing that the girls, now young adults, are still haunted by nightmares of Mama. Despite years of therapy and attempts to live normal lives, they cannot escape the feeling that something is watching them. Victoria, now in her early twenties, is especially disturbed, and we see her struggling with visions of Mama lurking in the shadows.
The trailer takes a darker turn when strange occurrences start happening around Victoria and Lilly. Objects move on their own, mirrors shatter, and a familiar, ghastly figure appears in the corner of their vision—Mama has returned. But this time, she’s more vengeful, her anger fueled by years of separation.
Annabel, determined to protect the girls, begins investigating the origins of Mama’s curse. She discovers that Mama’s spirit is tethered to something far more sinister and ancient than they had imagined. To free themselves, they must venture back to the woods where it all began and confront Mama one last time.
The trailer builds up to tense moments of horror, with flashes of the terrifying ghost appearing in dark hallways, reaching out with her twisted hands, and a horrifying scene of the girls being pulled into the darkness.
It ends with a chilling line from Mama, her voice echoing from the shadows: “You are still my children.”