Wicked: For Good (PG)
Cast: Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Jonathan Bailey, Ethan Slater
Release Date: November 21, 2025
Runtime: 2 hr. 18 mins.
Genre: Fantasy, Adventure
The final chapter of the untold story of the witches of Oz begins with Elphaba and Glinda estranged and living with the consequences of their choices.Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo), now demonized as The Wicked Witch of the West, lives in exile, hidden within the Ozian forest while continuing her fight for the freedom of Oz’s silenced Animals and desperately trying to expose the truth she knows about The Wizard (Jeff Goldblum).Glinda, meanwhile, has become the glamorous symbol of Goodness for all of Oz, living at the palace in Emerald City and reveling in the perks of fame and popularity. Under the instruction of Madame Morrible (Oscar® winner Michelle Yeoh), Glinda is deployed to serve as an effervescent comfort to Oz, reassuring the masses that all is well under the rule of The Wizard.As Glinda’s stardom expands and she prepares to marry Prince Fiyero (Olivier award winner and Emmy and SAG nominee Jonathan Bailey) in a spectacular Ozian wedding, she is haunted by her separation from Elphaba. She attempts to broker a conciliation between Elphaba and The Wizard, but those efforts will fail, driving Elphaba and Glinda only further apart. The aftershocks will transform Boq (Tony nominee Ethan Slater) and Fiyero forever, and threaten the safety of Elphaba’s sister, Nessarose (Marissa Bode), when a girl from Kansas comes crashing into all their lives.As an angry mob rises against the Wicked Witch, Glinda and Elphaba will need to come together one final time. With their singular friendship now the fulcrum of their futures, they will need to truly see each other, with honesty and empathy, if they are to change themselves, and all of Oz, for good.
Watch TrailerReview
The filmmakers have decided to append the subtitle For Good onto this, the conclusion to their bifurcated adaptation of the insanely popular Broadway musical. An equally appropriate title might be Wicked: More of the Same, because that's exactly what this movie offers: more of Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo gazing longingly at one another, more of the lavish production design re-creating Oz, more of the undercooked political shenanigans, and (of course) more of the songs, which start to sound alike after a while. In short, Wicked: For Good has all the makings of a box-office success story since it will doubtlessly cause fans of 2024's Wicked to swoon.
To be clear, I didn't hate the movie. In fact, I enjoyed parts of it, even while recognizing the two most obvious issues: (1) a tendency to push some of the most interesting narrative aspects into the subtext, and (2) the inevitable bloat that comes from stretching a 150-minute stage play into a 300-minute, two-part movie. The argument for the expanded length is that it allows the story to be told in full, but the drawbacks are equally obvious: sleep-inducing stretches where nothing seems to be happening. The film is also more overtly political than the play, with unsubtle attempts to draw parallels between the Wizard's reign in Oz and contemporary events.
Director Jon M. Chu delivers, as promised, the story's second act, detailing how the now-outlawed Elphaba (Erivo) advances her PETA-approved campaign against the authoritarian reign of the Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) and his right-hand enchantress, Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh). Meanwhile, the powerless Glinda (Grande) soaks up the media spotlight as the administration's chosen darling while gradually beginning to doubt her role in things. Add in the Elphaba/Glinda rivalry for the affections of the personality-deprived Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey) and the arrival of Dorothy and Toto for their trip down the Yellow Brick Road.
Chu's strengths from Wicked are replicated in For Good. The production numbers are lavish (especially "Wonderful") and energetic, even though the songs aren't on quite the same level - Act I contains the play's two standouts, the peppy "Popular" and the anthem "Defying Gravity." Unfortunately, the meaty, edgier material related to deconstructing a beloved classic is de-emphasized. The film's exploration of how the media can create fictionalized portraits (of Elphaba, Glinda, and the Wizard) is touched on only superficially. The movie also takes its PG rating very seriously - the musical had a little more bite, and it's easy to imagine a faithful adaptation of the novel earning an R - which at times makes this feel like one of Disney's live-action remakes.
The movie doubles down on the unspoken sexual attraction between Elphaba and Glinda. Their love, although verbalized at one point, never crosses into the physical - it's all looks, glances, and body language. The chemistry between Erivo and Grande is palpable, which has the unintended consequence of making poor Jonathan Bailey seem like an afterthought. His underwritten Fiyero, allegedly the heartthrob desired by both women, feels like an impediment placed there to prevent consummation of a sapphic relationship.
Erivo, who earned an Oscar nomination for Wicked, isn't given the same level of dramatic material to navigate here as in the first film. Her singing remains strong, but the character doesn't enjoy the same degree of development. Grande's acting talent shows cracks. She's an excellent singer, but her performance seems to consist mainly of crying while the camera spins in a circle around her. Jeff Goldblum is as delightful as ever - it's to his credit that, as devious and duplicitous as the Wizard is, we still find ourselves liking him.
The ending feels rushed and vaguely unsatisfying, as if the screenplay, in its haste to wrap everything up and squeeze in another song or two, shortchanges a number of secondary plot lines. The conclusion to Elphaba's story, faithful to the musical but not the novel, comes across as contrived. Chu's decision to de-emphasize Dorothy seems appropriate for material designed specifically as a counterpoint to her perspective in The Wizard of Oz.
Blockbusters like the Wicked duology exist under the weight of massive fan-driven expectations, so it's no surprise that Chu plays it safe, leaning into fan service and offering "more" rather than "less." With such a built-in audience, a box-office disappointment is virtually impossible, but the film's long-term legacy is far less certain. Suffice it to say that those who love the play will sit enraptured through Wicked for Good and not think it's a minute too long. Those without the same depth of connection may leave wishing Chu had hired a less generous editor and made better use of his pruning shears.
© 2025 James Berardinelli
Synopsis
The final chapter of the untold story of the witches of Oz begins with Elphaba and Glinda estranged and living with the consequences of their choices.Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo), now demonized as The Wicked Witch of the West, lives in exile, hidden within the Ozian forest while continuing her fight for the freedom of Oz’s silenced Animals and desperately trying to expose the truth she knows about The Wizard (Jeff Goldblum).Glinda, meanwhile, has become the glamorous symbol of Goodness for all of Oz, living at the palace in Emerald City and reveling in the perks of fame and popularity. Under the instruction of Madame Morrible (Oscar® winner Michelle Yeoh), Glinda is deployed to serve as an effervescent comfort to Oz, reassuring the masses that all is well under the rule of The Wizard.As Glinda’s stardom expands and she prepares to marry Prince Fiyero (Olivier award winner and Emmy and SAG nominee Jonathan Bailey) in a spectacular Ozian wedding, she is haunted by her separation from Elphaba. She attempts to broker a conciliation between Elphaba and The Wizard, but those efforts will fail, driving Elphaba and Glinda only further apart. The aftershocks will transform Boq (Tony nominee Ethan Slater) and Fiyero forever, and threaten the safety of Elphaba’s sister, Nessarose (Marissa Bode), when a girl from Kansas comes crashing into all their lives.As an angry mob rises against the Wicked Witch, Glinda and Elphaba will need to come together one final time. With their singular friendship now the fulcrum of their futures, they will need to truly see each other, with honesty and empathy, if they are to change themselves, and all of Oz, for good.
Playing At
- Regal Green Hills
3815 Greenhills Village Drive, Nashville, TN - AMC Bellevue 12
8125 Sawyer Brown Road, Nashville, TN - AMC Bellevue 12
8125 Sawyer Brown Road, Nashville, TN - Regal Hollywood - Nashville
719 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN - Regal Hollywood - Nashville
719 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN - Regal Hollywood - Nashville
719 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN - Regal Hollywood - Nashville
719 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN - Regal Hollywood - Nashville
719 Thompson Lane, Nashville, TN - Regal Opry Mills
570 Opry Mills Drive, Nashville, TN - Regal Opry Mills
570 Opry Mills Drive, Nashville, TN - AMC Antioch 8
901 Bell Road, Antioch, TN - AMC Antioch 8
901 Bell Road, Antioch, TN - AMC DINE-IN Thoroughbred 20
633 Frazier Drive, Franklin, TN - AMC DINE-IN Thoroughbred 20
633 Frazier Drive, Franklin, TN - AMC DINE-IN Thoroughbred 20
633 Frazier Drive, Franklin, TN - AMC DINE-IN Thoroughbred 20
633 Frazier Drive, Franklin, TN - Regal Streets of Indian Lake
300 Indian Lake Boulevard - Building T, Hendersonville, TN - Regal Providence
401 South Mt. Juliet Road - Suite 490, Mt. Juliet, TN - Malco Smyrna Cinema
100 Movie Row - I-24 & Sam Ridley Pkwy, Smyrna, TN - NCG - Gallatin Cinemas
1035 Greensboro Dr., Gallatin, TN - Roxy 8 Theatre
646 Highway 46 South, Dickson, TN - AMC CLASSIC Spring Hill 12
2068 Crossing Circle, Spring Hill, TN - AMC CLASSIC Spring Hill 12
2068 Crossing Circle, Spring Hill, TN - AMC CLASSIC Spring Hill 12
2068 Crossing Circle, Spring Hill, TN - UEC Theatres Roxy Lebanon
200 Legends Drive, Lebanon, TN - AMC CLASSIC Murfreesboro 16
2626 Cason Square Boulevard, Murfreesboro, TN - AMC CLASSIC Murfreesboro 16
2626 Cason Square Boulevard, Murfreesboro, TN - AMC Stones River 9
1706 Old Fort Parkway, Murfreesboro, TN - AMC Stones River 9
1706 Old Fort Parkway, Murfreesboro, TN - Premiere 6 Theater
810 Northwest Broad Street - Jackson Heights Shopping Center, Murfreesboro, TN - Phoenix Theatres - Governor's Square Mall
2801 Wilma Rudolph Boulevard - Unit 200, Clarksville, TN - Phoenix Theatres - Governor's Square Mall
2801 Wilma Rudolph Boulevard - Unit 200, Clarksville, TN - Regal Clarksville
1810 Tiny Town Road, Clarksville, TN - Regal Clarksville
1810 Tiny Town Road, Clarksville, TN - Regal Clarksville
1810 Tiny Town Road, Clarksville, TN