Title: Kick Ass 2 (2013)
Director: Jeff Wadlow
Cast: Aaron Taylor Johnson, Chloe Grace Moretz, Christopher
Mintz-Plasse, Jim Carrey, Donald Faison, Clark Duke, Morris Chestnut
The thing I enjoyed about Kick Ass (2010) is that it presented us
with characters who don’t have super powers, they aren’t mutants, they aren’t
aliens from another planet. These masked vigilantes are essentially pissed off
citizen’s that dress up in costumes to do what the police doesn’t do, they take
preventive action towards crime, they don’t sit around eating donuts in a coffee
shop waiting for their walky talkies to tell them some disaster has just gone
down, they don’t arrive at a scene to pick up the pieces, or fill out paper
work, nope these vigilantes are patrolling the streets trying to nip crime in
the butt, before the bad guys do their thing! They are colorful versions of Charles
Bronson in Death Wish (1974) only difference is that Bronson simply walked
around in a trench coat, while the heroes in Kick Ass dress up in silly
costumes and hide their faces behind masks. Oh, and Bronson never walked around
with a Samurai sword in his trench coat!
The premise for this sequel is that Kick Ass has kind of
forgotten how to be a super hero, so he wants Hit Girl to train him, to help
him get back into the ass kicking business, after all, Kick Ass is credited in
the media with having started the whole masked vigilante movement, he can’t
just walk out of this thing he started. Hit Girl helps him and she’s thankfully
still very much in the ass kicking business, the only problem is that her new
step dad wants her to lead a normal life. So in order to please him (and her
dads dying wishes) she attempts to leave her vigilante days behind and takes a
stab at being a regular teenage girl, which means joining the cheerleading
team, going out on dates, attending sleep over’s and dressing more girly. But
is that what she’s really all about? Is Mindy Macready Hit Girl or not?
Meanwhile, the former hero known as “Red Mist” decides he wants to get revenge
for his father’s death, so he has only one thing in his mind: killing Kick Ass.
In order to do so, he leaves his hero name behind and now calls himself ‘The
Motherfucker’ and calls upon anyone who is willing to join his vengeful crusade.
Will Kick Ass be ready to go up against ‘The Motherfucker’ and his gang?
Some controversy was stirred concerning Jim Carrey and his
character ‘Coronel Stars and Stripes’. You see, at one point Jim Carrey was all
gung-ho and happy to be in Kick Ass 2. But then, the tragic events that happened
in Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton Connecticut made him change his mind.
In case you’ve forgotten, the Sandy Hook Massacre was all about this 20 year
old man who one day killed his own mother, then, went to Sandy Hook Elementary School,
shot twenty kids and six staff members, then to put the icing on the cake, shot
himself. According to Carrey, after these events took place he had a change of
heart and suddenly didn’t want to promote Kick Ass 2 because of its levels of
violence? Truth be told, Kick Ass 2 is not more violent than the first Kick Ass
film, in fact I found that the levels of graphic violence were considerably
brought down for this sequel. Yeah there’s blood and decapitations…but it’s still
less graphic then anything that happened in the first film.
"Yeah! There's a dog on your balls!"
But that’s not even the point; the point is that Kick Ass 2
isn’t going to augment the levels of violence in the world. Jim Carrey not
promoting the film isn’t going to stop more mass murders. True, the events that
occurred in Sandy Hook were tragic, but they are not related to movies, they are
related to way bigger problems in society, in reality, films though violent and
profane always try to bring out the best in all of us. Even a violent film like
Kick Ass has in the end a positive message to it. I just hate it when people
blame movies for the crazy things that happen in the real world? Chole Moretz
put it nicely in an interview when she said that if we we’re all
that gullible we’d all dress up like princesses after seeing a Disney movie. It’s
not like I would pick up a chainsaw and chop off my own hand after seeing Evil
Dead II (1987) you know what I mean? And I don’t want to say that the cinematic
medium isn’t a powerful one, because it is. Movies are powerful medium, quite
possibly the fastest way to transmit ideas and concepts to the masses, still,
this doesn’t mean we can’t see a violent movie and see what it’s trying to
convey without getting violent. I mean, I can see a graphic and violent film
like A Clockwork Orange (1971) and understand it’s really a film about learning
to give something back to society as opposed to abusing our power. We all know
movies are fake, most of us know how to differentiate between fiction and
reality, we know how to grasp a concept that a film is trying to convey even
though it’s a violent film. If you don’t then my friends it’s something to work
on okay! So don’t give me that bull. My big question for Carrey is, dude, didn’t
you read the script? Now on the other hand if Carrey’s comments were just a
publicity prank to grab some headlines and give the movie some media coverage,
that I understand; that I can get!
Chloe Grace Moretz, goofing around behind the scenes
So; on to the movie itself. How was it? Well, I’d say that
though it isn’t the same director (Matthew Vaughn stepped out for whatever the
reason) the film managed to retain the same feel of the original. We still got
the goofy situations with the vigilantes trying to be all that they can be even
though they are all just regular people. Loved all the inside jokes at
superheroes and comic books; comic book fans will giggle on a constant basis. I
will make an observation though; the film is named Kick Ass, not Hit Girl, so
why does the film feel that it’s more about Hit Girl then Kick Ass himself? As
it is, Hit-Girl has the more interesting story arc here, Kick Ass, as a
character, is always playing catch up. I get it, Hit Girl was such a hit with
the fan boys across the world that they gave her more screen time. If they ever
make a third one, and I hope they do, well, I hope they focus a bit more on Kick
Ass himself and his journey towards becoming a hero, because as it is, on this
sequel Kick Ass feels like the sidekick, which has always been the case from
the very first film. The assortment of villains was pretty nifty. ‘The
Motherfucker’ gathers a group of villains to achieve his goals, and so we end
up with this crazy group of villains. My favorite was this crazy Russian lady
called ‘Mother Russia’, wow, crazy character! She’s the one responsible for most
of the graphic violence in the film.
By far the best thing about the movie is how the vigilantes
all decide to form a group called ‘Justice Forever’ which feels like the low
budget version of ‘The Avengers’ or ‘The Justice League’. I loved those scenes
where they get together to patrol the streets and kick ass together. There’s
this really cool scene where they fight some villains, and everyone does their
part to kick some ass. I love the mantra they shout before going out into the
streets. The comic book related jokes fly when these guys get together, funny
stuff. So, in the end I think this movie is getting a bad rap unnecessarily,
everything is so freaking ‘politically correct’ that if a film has even an inkling
of graphic violence or profanity (which Kick Ass 2 has a lot of) the media
boycotts it and the masses tune out. I guess it’s all part of the dumbing down of
the masses, can’t have them getting violent or emotional, we can’t have the
masses, god forbid, exposed to the idea of taking matters into their own hands
and trying to make a difference on their own like the vigilantes on this film
now do we? But whatever my peoples, I’m always for the waking up of the consciousness,
the not playing it so freaking safe, the idea of living your life more or less
on the edge, without so much predictability. I’m always pro-action, pro go out
there and do stuff. Not necessarily putting on a mask and kicking ass out on
the streets, but maybe fighting our own personal motherfuckers and taking
control of our destinies, becoming who we really are or should be; as this film,
even through its violence, implies. Let’s read between the lines people!
Rating: 4 out of 5