Arnold Schwarzenegger: Luke's Ready to Tango with Carrie-Anne Moss' Spy in 'Fubar' S2
- Netflix's FUBAR Season 2 premieres Thursday, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as CIA operative Luke Brunner facing new threats and his former lover Greta.
- This season centers on Luke confronting Greta Nelso, presumed dead since a 1989 car accident, who now appears as a stealthy villain working for a different enemy.
- Carrie-Anne Moss, known for The Matrix and Marvel roles, joins as Greta, engaging heavily with Schwarzenegger in an intense spy drama blending action and comedy.
- FUBAR’s first season, released in May 2023, amassed nearly 90 million viewing hours despite mixed critical reviews, with a 50% Rotten Tomatoes score and a 68% audience rating.
- The new season’s complex plot involving "The Greta Code" suggests heightened stakes and character conflicts, continuing FUBAR’s blend of over-the-top espionage and family drama.
22 Articles
22 Articles
'FUBAR' season 2 cast: See who's joining Arnold Schwarzenegger in the Netflix series’ second outing
Carrie-Anne Moss joins season 2 as an East German spy with an eye for Arnold's grizzly CIA operative. Christos Kalohoridis/Netflix Carrie-Anne Moss as Greta and Arnold Schwarzenegger as Luke in 'FUBAR' season 2Key PointsNetflix action-comedy FUBAR stars Arnold Schwarzenegger and Monica Barbaro as father-and-daughter CIA operatives.Carrie-Anne Moss, Enrico Colantoni, and Guy Burnet are new additions to FUBAR season 2.The second season premiered o…
Arnold Schwarzenegger: Luke's ready to tango with Carrie-Anne Moss' spy in 'Fubar' S2
Arnold Schwarzenegger told UPI Luke Brunner, the CIA operative he plays in "Fubar," has to face his past if he wants to stop a villain (Carrie-Anne Moss) from destroying the world in Season 2.
In the Netflix series "Fubar" Arnold Schwarzenegger takes on his image as an action star. At the start of the second season, the 77-year-old talks about dance training and stunts in old age.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's corny action series FUBAR returns to Netflix: 'Season 2 is bananas'
Years ago, I interviewed a screenwriter who worked on some of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s most iconic films -- titles like Kindergarten Cop that walked the line between machismo and absurdity. The writer told me he and his colleagues would, no surprise, shape entire jokes around Arnold’s unmistakable Austrian accent. Lines like, “No more ‘Mr. Kimble, I have to go to the bathroom.’ There is no bathroom!” or the unforgettable “It’s not a too-mah!” whi…
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