


My Spy The Eternal City


My Spy The Eternal City
Your feedback improves this guide
Your feedback highlights guides that need a second look and keeps the rating trustworthy.
Does this age rating seem accurate to you?
Sign in to vote
Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
2/5
Moderate
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This sequel blends family comedy, spy action, and a school trip through Italy, with a playful tone but a more suspenseful plot than a purely child focused adventure. The main sensitive elements come from a terrorist conspiracy, a nuclear threat, a kidnapping, chase scenes, fights, and several moments where teenagers are in credible danger, even though the film appears to avoid graphic injury detail. The intensity is moderate but fairly frequent, because the story keeps returning to urgency, surveillance, and the fear of an attack, which may unsettle younger viewers despite the humor and the caring bond between the central characters. There is no notable sexual content, only mild teen romance and crush material, and the language seems limited to mild insults or brief sharp exchanges. For parents, the main thing to watch is how quickly the film moves from jokes to peril, since some children may enjoy the comedy while still feeling anxious about the kidnapping and bomb threat. I would recommend it more comfortably from about age 9, ideally with an adult available to reassure children about the danger based plot and the scenes involving threatened kids and public landmarks.
Synopsis
JJ, a veteran CIA agent, reunites with his protégé Sophie, in order to prevent a catastrophic nuclear plot targeting the Vatican.
Difficult scenes
A central part of the story involves a terrorist plot connected to old nuclear bombs and a threat against the Vatican. Even without graphic imagery, the idea of a large scale attack on a real and famous place can be unsettling for a young child who already understands what that kind of danger means. A significant section of the plot involves the kidnapping of a teenage boy who is close to the heroine, which creates stronger emotional tension than a simple comic chase. Children who are sensitive to abduction or separation themes may react to the fear around the captured character and the urgency of the rescue. Several action scenes include chases, physical confrontations, and agents or villains using weapons during the mission. The violence seems mostly stylized and not injury focused, but the fast pace and repeated danger can still feel stressful or tiring for younger viewers. The film also uses tension between a teenager wanting independence and an adult who keeps watching over her for safety. That conflict is often understandable and sometimes funny, but it happens in a context where the girl is genuinely exposed to threatening adults, which increases the sense of vulnerability.
Where to watch
No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.
Availability checked on Apr 01, 2026
About this title
- Format
- Feature film
- Year
- 2024
- Runtime
- 1h 51m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Peter Segal
- Main cast
- Dave Bautista, Chloe Coleman, Kristen Schaal, Ken Jeong, Anna Faris, Flula Borg, Taeho K, Billy Barratt, Craig Robinson, Tamer Burjaq
- Studios
- STXfilms, MWM Studios, Good Fear, Dogbone Entertainment
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
2/5
Moderate
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This sequel blends family comedy, spy action, and a school trip through Italy, with a playful tone but a more suspenseful plot than a purely child focused adventure. The main sensitive elements come from a terrorist conspiracy, a nuclear threat, a kidnapping, chase scenes, fights, and several moments where teenagers are in credible danger, even though the film appears to avoid graphic injury detail. The intensity is moderate but fairly frequent, because the story keeps returning to urgency, surveillance, and the fear of an attack, which may unsettle younger viewers despite the humor and the caring bond between the central characters. There is no notable sexual content, only mild teen romance and crush material, and the language seems limited to mild insults or brief sharp exchanges. For parents, the main thing to watch is how quickly the film moves from jokes to peril, since some children may enjoy the comedy while still feeling anxious about the kidnapping and bomb threat. I would recommend it more comfortably from about age 9, ideally with an adult available to reassure children about the danger based plot and the scenes involving threatened kids and public landmarks.
Synopsis
JJ, a veteran CIA agent, reunites with his protégé Sophie, in order to prevent a catastrophic nuclear plot targeting the Vatican.
Difficult scenes
A central part of the story involves a terrorist plot connected to old nuclear bombs and a threat against the Vatican. Even without graphic imagery, the idea of a large scale attack on a real and famous place can be unsettling for a young child who already understands what that kind of danger means. A significant section of the plot involves the kidnapping of a teenage boy who is close to the heroine, which creates stronger emotional tension than a simple comic chase. Children who are sensitive to abduction or separation themes may react to the fear around the captured character and the urgency of the rescue. Several action scenes include chases, physical confrontations, and agents or villains using weapons during the mission. The violence seems mostly stylized and not injury focused, but the fast pace and repeated danger can still feel stressful or tiring for younger viewers. The film also uses tension between a teenager wanting independence and an adult who keeps watching over her for safety. That conflict is often understandable and sometimes funny, but it happens in a context where the girl is genuinely exposed to threatening adults, which increases the sense of vulnerability.