Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 28000000

Revenue

$ 60795985

Top Billed Cast

Aaron Taylor-Johnson

Dave Lizewski / Kick-Ass

Chloë Grace Moretz

Mindy Macready / Hit Girl

Christopher Mintz-Plasse

Chris D'Amico / The Motherfucker

Lyndsy Fonseca

Katie Deauxma

Jim Carrey

Colonel Stars and Stripes

Iain Glen

Uncle Ralph

Clark Duke

Marty / Battle Guy

Lindy Booth

Night Bitch

Garrett M. Brown

Mr. Lizewski

Morris Chestnut

Detective Marcus Williams

Donald Faison

Dr. Gravity

John Leguizamo

Javier

Augustus Prew

Todd / Ass Kicker

Robert Emms

Insect Man

Monica Dolan

Tommy's Mum

Steven Mackintosh

Tommy's Dad

Andy Nyman

The Tumor

Daniel Kaluuya

Black Death

Tom Wu

Genghis Carnage

Olga Kurkulina

Mother Russia

Yancy Butler

Mrs. D'Amico

Claudia Lee

Brooke

Ella Purnell

Dolce

Tanyaradzwa Fear

Harlow

Benedict Wong

Mr. Kim

Sophie Wu

Erika Cho

Amy Anzel

Mrs. Zane

Matt Steinberg

Mr. Radical

Trenyce

Coach Podell

Angelica Jopling

Lois

Enzo Cilenti

Lou

Wesley Morgan

Simon

Dimitri Vantis

Tony

Stewart Scudamore

Eyal

Tom Benedict Knight

Alley Hood

Mary Kitchen

News Reporter

Charlie Clapham

Goth Kid

Katrina Durden

Red Fang

Trevor Allan Davies

Old Man

Paul Raposo

Guido #1

David Vena

Guido #2

Chris Chan

Store Clerk

Chuck Liddell

Chuck Liddell

King Lau

Chinese Bouncer

Chantelle Chung

Chinese Hooker

Eben Young

News Reader

John Bregar

Mother Russia Cop

Christopher Cordell

Mother Russia Cop

Mike Chute

Mother Russia Cop

Shane Daly

Mother Russia Cop

Kevan Kase

Mother Russia Cop

Martin Roach

Mother Russia Cop

John Schwab

Detective

Todd Boyce

Chief of Police

Jesse Camacho

Onlooker

Anthony J. Mifsud

Convict #1

Rob Archer

Convict #2

Jamie Andrew Cutler

Goggles

Adam Bond

Funeral Cop

Sia Alipour

BloodSpike (uncredited)

Bhanu Alley

Sleazy Japanese Businessman (uncredited)

Lee Asquith-Coe

Officer Barnhart (uncredited)

Richard Bradshaw

Cop #3 (uncredited)

Samantha Coughlan

Apocalypse Meow (uncredited)

Ellis Crewe-Candy

Pimp Daddy (uncredited)

Leigh Dent

Passerby (uncredited)

Katrina Durden

Red Fang (uncredited)

Sophie Ellis

Mean Girl (uncredited)

James Embree

Cop #1 (uncredited)

Cynthia Garbutt

Epilogue Nurse (uncredited)

David Golt

Homeless Man in Soup Kitchen (uncredited)

Howard Green

Arresting Officer #2 (uncredited)

Jenny Jacoya

Firefox (uncredited)

Ethan J. Knight

SWAT Commander Lee Renolds (uncredited)

Liam Logan

Police Lieutenant S.W.A.T. Team (uncredited)

Matthew David McCarthy

NYPD Cop Sergeant Ellis (uncredited)

Vander McLeod

New York Cop (uncredited)

Allistair McNab

TMC (uncredited)

Katherine Moran

Jock Girlfriend (uncredited)

Stuart Mulcaster

NYPD (uncredited)

John E O'Grady

Rocket Man (uncredited)

Amanda Piery

Moon Bird (uncredited)

Alexis Rodney

Skinny (uncredited)

Bailey Ryan

Hot Nerd Girl (uncredited)

Wolf Ryman

Guido (uncredited)

Shane Salter

NYPD Cop in Alley (uncredited)

Parker Sawyers

Blast Hammer (uncredited)

Linus Scheithauer

Thunderwasp (uncredited)

Tom Swacha

Bad Ass Warrior (uncredited)

Leon Symnz

Justice Forever (uncredited)

Winson Ting

Chinese Gang Member (uncredited)

Arran Topham

Cop #2 (uncredited)

Baxter Westby

Homeless Boy (uncredited)

Daniel Aiken

Arresting Officer #72 (uncredited)

Tanya Fear

Harlow

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A review by unclepizzaman

Written by unclepizzaman on 2013-08-24

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A review by DoryDarko

Written by DoryDarko on 2017-02-21

*** This review contains MAJOR spoilers *** This is actually not so much a review as it is a vehicle for me to express my utter disgust of what was supposed to be a great sequel to what I consider one of the coolest movies ever made. I absolutely loved Kick-Ass. It was fresh, it was original, and in spite of its crude and graphic violence, absolutely hilarious. Its sequel, is nothing short of an abomination. For your convenience, I have comprised a list of Everything Wrong with Kick-Ass 2: 1. The gore. It's not that it was worse than KA1, it's that it was very different in tone. Whereas in the first movie – where the violence was equally gut-wrenching – the nature of it all was laugh-out-loud hilarious, mostly because it was executed by a foul-mouthed 12-year-old school girl. KA2 on the other hand, feels more like a snuff movie where good guys and innocent bystanders are brutally slaughtered, just for the hell of it. Which leads me to point number two: 2. The targets. In the first movie, the whole point was easy: killing bad guys. So, no bad feelings and no conflict of interest. For the second installment, it seems the moral compass has taken a 180 degree turn. Here we have to sit and watch the good guys dropping dead one by one, and it isn't the least bit funny. I'd like to give you a heads-up on the brutal murder of Dave's dad, the most innocent good guy of them all. Yeah, I didn't see than one coming either. 3. The bad guys. Good god. Rarely have I seen such an array of dumb, sickeningly stupid villains. Most of the slaughtering and mayhem is done by one block-of-concrete-with-boobs called Mother Russia (what's in a name?). Everything about her just makes you sick to your stomach, especially the way she offs her victims. She is part of the main villain's gang, and don't even get me started on this guy… Remember Red Mist? He was pretty funny in KA1, wasn't he. Yeah well, those days are over. After accidentally on purpose killing his own mother (!), he proclaims himself the new great villain of New York, henceforth calling himself The Motherf***er (again, what's in a name…). He rallies a group of equally douche baggy cronies. Their mission is to kill Kick-Ass and all who follow him. Their first strike? Killing off the best new character. 4. Jim Carrey's screen time. The poor guy clocks out at exactly 7 minutes and 45 seconds. He plays Colonel Stars and Stripes, and he is by far the best addition to the cast. What's remarkable about his performance is that he's barely recognizable. His speaking voice is low and brooding, and there's not a funny face in sight. Really cool character all around. After waiting for what feels like forever for him to finally appear, guess what; not ten minutes later – gone. Impaled, slaughtered and decapitated by Mother Russia. I'd like to have a hearty word with the "screenwriter" who's responsible for this. He needs to go back to school. Here's my advice anyway – free of charge: YOU DON'T KILL OFF THE BEST CHARACTER HALFWAY THROUGH THE MOVIE. Dumbass. 5. The "humour". In KA1, the humour was cheeky, intelligent, and perfect satire. And where it was crude, it was right up at the top, but never really over it. Second time around, we have to make do with projectile vomiting and violent diarrhoea. Really, poop jokes…? Now this is a perfect example of what 'we' (we meaning – people over 13 with normal intelligence and a healthy sense of humour) call "rock bottom". Yes. They go that low. I'm going to stop here before I start remembering all of the other "jokes". 6. Lack of proper Hit-Girl action. Hit-Girl was always the star of the show. In KA2, she is given a dumb sub-plot where she vows to quit her alter-ego job and become a 'normal', prissy little cheerleader, competing with other Barbie girls to become popular. I really, really hated this story line. I don't even care if it was in the original comics, it sucked. The reason why it sucked the most is because effectively, this means that the essence of Hit-Girl is completely vacant for about 60% of the movie! And that's WAY too much time for the most beloved character to mope around apologetically before she finally gets her s**t together roughly 10 minutes before the end of the movie. 7. Mister Kick-Ass himself. Something went wrong here. I don't know if it was the character that was poorly written or Aaron Taylor-Johnson that came up short, but he was very different from the first movie, in which he had a really cute, geeky charm about him. Here, he was inconspicuous and dull, like a bystander in his own story. Or perhaps he was just overshadowed by the abundance of new and reformed characters… In any case, he was barely there to be noticed. 8. Soundtrack. The score of KA1 was so damn cool, with original, poppy punk music and electro that consistently added something to every scene. Here, I only remember one scene that caught that vibe and it still wasn't half as good. 9. It was seriously offensive. A "joke" about rape? Are you kidding me?! And I'm not talking about some guys hanging around, talking about wanting to 'do' some girl or whatever. No, I'm talking about The Motherf***er seriously intending to rape Night Bitch, except he can't because he's got no wood. Real classy. There are some redeeming points to this otherwise complete crap fest, but honestly, they are so few and far in between they're not even worth mentioning. Well, I guess this is what you get for hiring some D-grade nobody to replace Matthew Vaughn. Don't waste your time with this garbage. _(June 2014)_

A review by Dark Jedi

Written by Dark Jedi on 2018-01-20

The first Kick Ass movie was a fresh idea and I quite liked that movie. Unfortunately this one seems to have be the creation of someone that believes that a good movie can be made by stacking extreme silliness and vulgarities on top of each other until you reach about a 100 minutes or so. Most of the movie is unbelievably silly. The original movie also had plenty of silly moments but they were more there to support the plot and not to build the movie as in this one. The main villain is so contrived and stupid that he is just not funny. The so called “superheroes” are equally ridiculous. The costumes are just awful. Sure, they are supposed to be amateurs but still… The entire movie is pretty much shouldered by Hit-Girl who is the only one who is not absolutely ridiculous. Without her this movie would have been a total turkey. Unfortunately the vulgarity seeking script writer managed to put her up in a overdone and very disgusting puking scene that really dragged down the movie. The scenes with Hit-Girl in them, except the above mentioned one, and the action scenes are where almost all the enjoyment of the movie lies. The rest is either so silly or so disgusting that it is barely watchable.

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-09-05

I was actually quite surprised to see three of the leads who made the first film (2010) return for this far inferior sequel. Following on from the denouement of that enterprise, "Red Mist" (Christopher Mintz-Plasse) is using his father's ill-gotten gains to assemble a force that can combat the growing number of lycra-clad have-a-go heroes that are attempting to cut crime in their community. Without dad this time, it falls to "Mindy" (Chloë Grace Moretz) to train up our still pretty hapless hero (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) so they can be ready for the formidable foes that are now facing them. ATJ still looks great with his shirt off, thereafter this is really nothing at all to write home about. It's all just by-the-numbers film making with perfectly choreographed, and extended, combat scenes with violence that has become more graphically brutal leading to a conclusion that you don't need any kind of map to find. What made the first film a bit quirkier is not in evidence here; the language and humour is largely plain crass and Jim Carrey adds really very little as this rumbles along. Hopefully we will never see any more of "Kick-Ass"; this mini-franchise has definitely run it's course and belongs in glass case.

A review by r96sk

Written by r96sk on 2024-06-01

Properly underwhelming. <em>'Kick-Ass 2'</em> isn't a bad film in and of itself, it just feels like a serious miscue on all counts - or perhaps I was just expecting something different. In my eyes, I feel like this plot is the type you do for the original movie in a series - not the sequel. It's a character-building story, whereas I think with a follow-up it needs to be a greater continuation. It's also nowhere near as entertaining. <em>'Kick-Ass'</em> has a lot of fun and knows it, this just disappoints as it aims for something more sincere - which didn't quite work, for me. Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Chloë Grace Moretz felt off it too, at least in comparison to last time out. Jim Carrey feels wasted, this is probably his most forgettable performance that I've seen - and I've seen alot of Carrey's work. It is at least a showing of slightly different ilk compared to his usual schtick, I guess. Olga Kurkulina plays a good character though, while Iain Glen makes himself known in a tiny role. Elsewhere, there are annoying (albeit minor) recasts, always a pet hate of mine. In conclusion, I wanted to enjoy this but I honestly didn't. Feels like a missed opportunity.