This time, Loki isn’t laughing with you—he’s laughing at the end of everything.
The Mask 3: Return of Loki (2025) marks the long-awaited return to the zany, chaotic, and supernatural world of the iconic green-faced trickster—but this time, the god behind the mask is done playing games. Building on the legacy of the original The Mask (1994) and the less-loved Son of the Mask (2005), this third installment resurrects the energy, danger, and outrageous fun of the franchise—infused with modern cinematic flair and Norse mythology on steroids.
The story kicks off when an ancient relic is unearthed during a covert expedition in Norway: Loki’s original mask—far more powerful and sinister than the one seen before. When the artifact falls into the hands of a troubled street magician named Eli Cruz, the world gets a new Mask... but the god who created it isn’t far behind. Loki, no longer content to influence from afar, escapes his mythological prison to reclaim his full powers—and this time, he wants to reshape reality in his own chaotic image.
With reality itself beginning to fracture, Eli must choose between feeding his inner chaos or becoming the unlikely hero who can stop the god of mischief. Alongside him: a cunning archaeologist with a mysterious connection to the Norse realms, and a reclusive, older Stanley Ipkiss (Jim Carrey in a long-rumored cameo) who knows all too well the price of putting on the mask.
Return of Loki explodes with visual spectacle, surreal comedy, and wild cartoon violence, but underneath the madness lies a darker theme—about power, identity, and what happens when chaos becomes contagious. The film blends practical effects with stylized CGI and brings back the franchise’s signature mix of slapstick, satire, and supernatural thrills.