The Flintstones 2 — Bedrock Boogaloo (2026) roars back to life with a riotous blend of nostalgia, slapstick chaos, and warm-hearted Stone Age charm, bringing audiences once again into the colorful world of Bedrock. John Goodman returns as Fred Flintstone, still loud, lovable, and constantly one misstep away from flattening an entire zip code. Elizabeth Perkins shines as Wilma, the calm, grounded force who quietly prevents Fred from accidentally triggering prehistoric disasters on a daily basis. Rick Moranis slips effortlessly back into the role of Barney Rubble, eternally loyal and wonderfully clueless, while Rosie O’Donnell’s Betty brings sweetness, wit, and secret brilliance to the chaos the boys inevitably unleash. With delightful cameo appearances from Kyle MacLachlan and Halle Berry, the familiar faces of Bedrock gather for an adventure even wilder than before.

In this sequel, Bedrock is transforming faster than a stampeding brontosaurus. New “modern” Stone Age inventions sweep the town: a quarry-powered monorail pulled by triceratops, a pterodactyl-run hair salon prone to squawking meltdowns, foot-powered escalators requiring half the town to operate, and “shellphones” whose crab receptionists keep abandoning their posts. But the real shake-up comes when a slick and dangerously ambitious entrepreneur unveils his latest scheme — Bedrock’s first prehistoric theme park, Slate-O-Saurus World. When Fred accidentally becomes the park’s enthusiastic spokesperson after a hilarious misunderstanding, the entire town erupts with excitement. But the celebration doesn’t last long. Fred and Barney soon discover that the park’s construction threatens the local wildlife, including Dino’s newly discovered long-lost dino cousin, forcing the duo to confront a corporate giant determined to reshape Bedrock at any cost.

What follows is pure Bedrock madness as Fred pilots an out-of-control stone mech-suit through town, Barney briefly becomes a terrifying genius thanks to an intelligence potion, and Wilma and Betty go undercover at a luxury cave spa that turns out to be the center of the villain’s fraudulent operations. Meanwhile, Bam-Bam becomes the strongest — and surprisingly most competent — security guard the theme park has ever seen, and Dino unleashes a stampede of adorable miniature dinosaurs that leave chaos in their tiny, stomping wake. The final showdown erupts in a spectacular cascade of prehistoric mayhem as Slate-O-Saurus World collapses around them: malfunctioning mammoth-powered rides spin wildly, brontosaurus cranes swing out of control, lava tubes burst in fiery geysers, and Fred ultimately swings from a vine like a prehistoric Tarzan, shouting “YABBA-DABBA-DOOOOO!” as the entire structure crumbles behind him.

Beneath the rock-shattering humor and candy-colored chaos lies a heartfelt story about family, community, and the simple joys of Bedrock life — a world where foot-powered cars, bird-operated appliances, and tight-knit friendships mean more than any flashy modern invention ever could. With its vibrant energy, nostalgic charm, and joyful spirit, The Flintstones 2 — Bedrock Boogaloo proves that no family rocks harder, laughs louder, or loves stronger than the Flintstones.