SPLICED Magazine Issue 01 Oct/Nov 2013 | Page 120

SPLICED MOVIES / REVIEW / Kick-Ass 2 performance. We found ourselves laughing out loud at The Motherfucker's antics, as well as cringing at the more offensive and morally debatable scenes. Across town... Mindy has been grounded for going out as Hit-Girl after being told by her legal guardian, Detective Marcus Williams (Morris Chestnut), that she needs to forget that life. This leaves Dave with no choice but to team up with Justice Forever: a team of heroes lead by the polite yet brutal reborn Christian badass Captain Stars and Stripes (Jim Carrey). Captain Stars and Stripes takes on the father figure role for this film much like Big Daddy in the previous. We only wish that there was more of him so Carrey could have had more fun with the character. Unbeknown to Justice Forever, the Motherfucker has started assembling his own team of supervillains, known as “The Toxic Mega Cunts”, a collection of 120 ISSUE 01 "We found ourselves laughing out loud at The Motherfucker's antics, as well as cringing at the more offensive and morally debatable scenes." the meanest, toughest, scariest villains he could dig up. One to look out for in particular is Mother Russia, a musclebound Russian woman who’s hell-bent on death and destruction and bears an uncanny resemblance to Kurt Russell. The suburban set piece involving the cops and Mother Russia is a testament to her ability to kill and maim in the most subversive of ways. There’s even a lawnmower death scene redolent of Peter Jackson’s Braindead. Just then... The film’s final act leads us into an overthe-top, violent showdown. There are no bazookas or jetpacks this time round, but the stakes have been upped with the number of heroes and villains duking it out on-screen. It makes for an enjoyable, silly and entertaining film. While it might not be as good or as smart as the first Kick-Ass, Wadlow, Millar and co. deserve credit for taking the franchise in a new direction. Violent as the movie is, compared to Millar’s graphic novel of Jim Carrey gets less than eight minutes of screen time, but the actor has since distanced himself from KickAss 2 after announcing via Twitter that he no longer felt comfortable with the level of violence in the film, following the Sandy Hook tragedy which occurred just a month after the filming for Kick-Ass 2 was completed.