The scanners don’t see everything, and in the high-altitude world of 2026, the past never stays grounded. Carry-On 2: Priority Lane takes the claustrophobic tension of the first film and explodes it into a global network of shadows, where security isn’t just a protocol—it’s a weapon.

Ethan Kopek (Taron Egerton) is no longer the vulnerable TSA agent caught in a deadly game. Now a hardened elite security consultant for private aviation, Ethan has traded his blue uniform for a rugged, tactical edge. He has spent years trying to erase the trauma of that Christmas Eve, only to be pulled back into the abyss when a “ghost shipment” appears on the international radar—a package flagged with his own encrypted signature.

The nightmare achieves a new level of brilliance with the return of The Traveler (Jason Bateman). His calm, sociopathic wit remains the franchise’s heartbeat, but this time, he isn’t just a voice in an earpiece; he’s a phantom orchestrating a collapse of the global financial grid. Joining the chaos is “The Auditor” (Vanessa Kirby), a high-fashion mercenary who redefines the meaning of lethal elegance. Dressed in bespoke tactical silk and moving through the world’s most secure private terminals with predatory grace, she proves that the most dangerous contraband in 2026 isn’t a bomb—it’s a secret delivered with a killer look and a silenced barrel.

As Ethan reunites with Nora (Sofia Carson) to race across international borders—from the neon skylines of Dubai to the hidden hangars of Berlin—the line between hero and hostage completely vanishes. In the “Priority Lane,” there are no delays, no detours, and no mercy. This is a high-speed, tech-noir descent into a modern age of paranoia where every eye in the sky is watching, but no one is safe.