
The advertisements in the film are plentiful, but hey, you have to get the money from somewhere, and although I can immediately name 5 companies which advertised themselves in this film, the ads are more in place than in the first feature and spoil the fun much less. Which, surprisingly, was not so much felt in the first film.

It feels rushed, unfinished, and kinda cheap. Add some bad acting, some unanswered questions which I consider to be plot holes (what happened to the Asian guy? Where did he ever come from? Did Max buy implants for his wife? Did the boss ever find out what really happened?), even some mistakes (which are clearly not intended) in spelling, and what you get is what you could expect from a movie created and shot in several months. What I saw was the plot which followed the same formula as the first film and did not seek to invent something.

To be honest, I expected that this film would keep the good things about the first film and add something deeper, some philosophical point or moral. While the first Zero film was really something new in the Lithuanian film industry, the second film in the series does not feel all that fresh.
