Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sinbad, Phil Hartman (archive tribute)
Christmas has never been this turbo-charged.
Jingle All the Way 2: Turbo Christmas explodes onto the screen with bigger laughs, wilder chaos, and a sleigh-full of nostalgic energy as Arnold Schwarzenegger makes his triumphant holiday return. This time, the stakes are higher, the crowds are crazier, and the competition is downright ferocious.
Arnold slips effortlessly back into his legendary dad-on-a-mission mode, blending unstoppable physical comedy with the warm, earnest determination that made Howard Langston a holiday icon. Older but wiser — and still hilariously out of his depth — Howard swears he’s done chasing impossible gifts… until Christmas delivers a brand-new nightmare wrapped in shiny packaging.

Across the city, Sinbad roars back with scene-stealing intensity as Myron, still fired up, still unpredictable, and still convinced he should have been Turbo Man. He’s determined not to lose again, and when he discovers that the latest must-have toy — the ultra-rare Turbo Man Ultra Edition — is being released in a limited batch, his competitive fire erupts louder than a holiday parade cannon.
The moment the toy hits shelves, pandemonium begins. Howard and Myron plunge headfirst into a frantic, city-wide race that turns Christmas shopping into an all-out battlefield. Toy stores overflow like warzones of wrapping paper and broken displays. Online preorders crash instantly. Parents trample through aisles like stampeding reindeer. Rooftop chases erupt under swirling snowstorms, mall security goes into full tactical mode, and Santa impostors run black-market toy rings that make the North Pole look like a criminal empire.

In the middle of the chaos, Howard’s new mission becomes more than a quest for a toy — it becomes a desperate attempt to reconnect with his family, to make up for lost time, and to remind himself why Christmas mattered in the first place. Myron, meanwhile, battles not only Howard but also his own need to prove that he can actually win for once.
A heartfelt Phil Hartman tribute echoes throughout the film, honoring his unforgettable comedic charm through archive voice snippets, framed memories, and subtle callbacks — keeping his presence alive as a beloved part of the Jingle All the Way legacy.
As the competition escalates to absurd, high-octane heights, Howard and Myron’s rivalry transforms into a turbo-powered spectacle involving parade floats, malfunctioning jetpacks, hyperactive toy drones, and one shocking twist: the Turbo Man Ultra Edition may not be the only thing they’re fighting for.

Because in the end, Christmas isn’t about having the perfect gift —
it’s about fighting like crazy for the people you love.
Filled with explosive humor, insane stunts, heartwarming moments, and Arnold Schwarzenegger at peak festive form, Turbo Christmas delivers a single unstoppable truth:
In the battle for the ultimate holiday present, there’s no surrender…
only Turbo Power.