Kirsten Dunst says the next Minecraft movie has started rolling, pushing the video game franchise’s sequel from announcement to active production.
Dunst, who reports indicate joined A Minecraft Movie 2 as Alex in March, shared an update pointing to the start of filming. The signal matters because it gives fans the clearest sign yet that the follow-up to last year’s A Minecraft Movie has moved beyond casting and development chatter. Jack Black also factors into the production update, tying the sequel back to one of the first film’s most visible stars.
“It has begun” turned a routine production update into a clear marker: the sequel now stands in front of cameras, not just on a studio slate.
Key Facts
- Kirsten Dunst indicated filming has begun on A Minecraft Movie 2.
- Reports previously said Dunst joined the sequel as Alex in March.
- Jack Black appears connected to the production kickoff shared by Dunst.
- The sequel follows last year’s A Minecraft Movie.
The update also closes a small but notable loop in the project’s buildup. Dunst had publicly expressed interest in joining the franchise, and that interest now appears to have turned into a full-scale role in the sequel. In a studio era that often stretches projects across years of rumor and delay, a simple production post can carry unusual weight. It tells audiences that schedules have locked, talent has assembled, and the sequel has entered the phase where the movie actually gets made.
For the franchise, the timing suggests the studio wants to keep momentum alive while the first film still holds a place in audience memory. Game adaptations remain a fierce battleground in Hollywood, and recognizable stars help widen the appeal beyond core fans. Dunst’s arrival gives the sequel another familiar face, while Black’s presence reinforces continuity with the first installment.
What comes next will matter more than any single photo from set. Fans will now watch for official plot details, more casting confirmations, and the first hints of how the sequel expands the Overworld on screen. If production stays on track, the film will test whether Minecraft can grow from a one-off adaptation into a durable movie series with room for bigger characters, broader audiences, and a longer future.