Bill & Ted Face the Music 2020

As middle-aged dudes, Bill & Ted must recapture their musical mojo to save the universe from temporal chaos. Their quest for the greatest song ever written becomes an intergalactic adventure, fueled by their daughters' youthful energy and unexpected alliances with legendary musicians and historical figures. Will they find harmony in the cosmos and prove that rock 'n' roll can indeed be the key to saving the world?

As middle-aged dudes, Bill & Ted must recapture their musical mojo to save the universe from temporal chaos. Their quest for the greatest song ever written becomes an intergalactic adventure, fueled by their daughters' youthful energy and unexpected alliances with legendary musicians and historical figures. Will they find harmony in the cosmos and prove that rock 'n' roll can indeed be the key to saving the world?

Does Bill & Ted Face the Music have end credit scenes?

No!

Bill & Ted Face the Music does not have end credit scenes.

Ratings


Metacritic

65

Metascore

6.0

User Score

Rotten Tomatoes
review

%

TOMATOMETER

review

0%

User Score

IMDb

5.9 /10

IMDb Rating

TMDB

59

%

User Score

Movie Quiz


Bill & Ted Face the Music Quiz: Test your knowledge of the adventures of Bill and Ted in their latest time-traveling musical quest.

Who are the daughters of Bill and Ted?

Plot Summary

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The movie opens with Billie and Thea sharing the tale of their fathers, Bill S. Preston, Esq and Ted “Theodore” Logan, portrayed by Brigette Lundy-Paine and Samara Weaving respectively. These two rockers, known as the Wyld Stallyns, once traveled through time and even faced the depths of Hell in their quest to create legendary music. Despite their initial triumph with numerous successful albums, their creative output has dwindled, leading to a waning interest from the world around them. Their reckless actions have caused reality itself to warp, resulting in historical figures being misplaced in various eras—one example being Jesus swapping places with Kid Cudi. They have yet to compose the song that would unite the world.

Fast forward to the present day, where Bill and Ted find themselves at the wedding of Ted’s younger brother Deacon (played by Beck Bennett) and Missy (portrayed by Amy Stock-Poynton), their former stepmother. The duo attempts to perform and create music on a hodgepodge of instruments, but it simply does not resonate well, leading Ted’s father Jonathan (played by Hal Landon Jr.) to derogatorily label the guys as “washed up losers” and point out that their wives, Princess Joanna “Jo” (played by Jayma Mays) and Princess Elizabeth “Liz” (played by Erinn Hayes), are the true adults in their lives. Still, Billie and Thea hold onto hope for their fathers.

In a bid to rekindle their relationships, Liz and Jo decide to take their husbands to couple’s therapy with Dr. Wood (Jillian Bell). There, it’s clear that Bill and Ted are lost without each other, struggling even to express their love for their wives. Liz and Jo express their love but reveal their frustrations with the stagnancy of their husbands’ lives.

Feeling dejected by their lives’ perceptions and contemplating drastic measures like selling his beloved guitar, Ted’s life takes a sudden turn when an egg-shaped time machine appears. Out steps Kelly (Kristen Schaal), the daughter of their former time-travel companion Rufus, who tragically passed away. Kelly informs the fathers that they must accompany her to meet her mother, The Great Leader (Holland Taylor), who indicates that the duo has yet to write the world-unifying song, and as reality unravels further, they have a mere 80 minutes to complete it.

Determined but pressed for time, Bill and Ted choose to travel into their own futures to steal the song they believe they have already composed. Their journey takes them to 2022, where they find their future selves performing to an indifferent audience. Instead of success, they discover that their future counterparts have only multiplied their failures—losing their wives and estranging their daughters in the process. In sheer desperation, they retreat to their present, encountering their wives once again in therapy. Frantic and desperate, they implore them not to join their future selves, acknowledging their troubles expressing love.

Simultaneously, back in the future, the Great Leader devises a sinister plan: perhaps removing Bill and Ted from existence is the only way to restore balance. Thus, she sends Dennis (Anthony Carrigan), a time-traveling cyborg, to eliminate them. Meanwhile, Kelly races back to find the fathers but unexpectedly meets Billie and Thea. Inspired, the girls decide to help their dads save the world by traveling back to 1968 to recruit Jimi Hendrix ([DazMann Still]) for their ultimate song.

Their quest leads them through various eras, including an intriguing visit to 2025, where they mistakenly believe they’ve achieved rock star status. Instead, they find their future selves in a regrettable situation. Just when things start to spiral out of control, Dennis arrives on the scene, ready to disrupt their plans.

Simultaneously, Billie and Thea explore musical history, bringing together figures like Louis Armstrong ([Jeremiah Craft]) and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ([Daniel Dorr]). However, events accumulate chaos when they, along with Kid Cudi and Dennis, find themselves in Hell after a series of misfortunes.

With their future in jeopardy, Bill and Ted encourage their daughters who have uncovered their knack for uniting music to take charge. The culmination of their efforts transpires back in present-day San Dimas, where reality threatens to unravel entirely. The duo discovers that they aren’t the sole heroes of this tale but rather that their daughters have been the true genius behind the unification song.

As the fabric of reality begins to stabilize at an incredible pace, Bill and Ted finally articulate their love for their wives, culminating in a grand performance that vibrantly rings through time itself, bringing together characters from various eras to contribute to this monumental moment. With a song finally written and played, everyone from the past to the present rejoices as a soundtrack wraps around the world, thus mending reality itself.

The film closes on an uplifting note, teeming with a sense of unity as the credits roll showing people worldwide harmonizing with music. An unexpected yet jubilant scene materializes post-credits with the older versions of Bill and Ted sharing their enduring bond through another epic guitar solo.

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