Kick-Ass 2

Issue 6 came out a few days ago. It was pretty great, actually. Mindy/Hit-Girl's return was hugely entertaining (if not iconic) and her "lesson" to the goons and then interrogation were great. The Times square stuff was set-up well and became a page-turner for me. Highlight of the issue was Mindy saying "They killed your dad, raped your girlfriend, and instead of doing something about it your blubbering like a ***** at the Oscars."

I'm actually hyped for the next issue. I haven't really felt that since Issue 1. This book has been a slow build, but I think it may actually pay off! The biggest surprise? This issue came out on time.
 
I guess I'm literally the only person who bought a copy.
 
I think it's safe to say that there won't be a Kick-Ass 2 movie. This book has been not good IMO and the lateness didn't help matters. I jumped off back around #3. They should have never waited until the 2nd to last issue to bring Hit-Girl back to action.
 
My gripe is that this is all pretty much a build up to the Times Squire battle we've known about since #1. It makes me doubt theres gonna be any big pay off conclusion to that, just the build up for Kick-Ass 3. You can't just make a book and build it up to a single moment and end it there, the story needs to continue and the character arcs conclude etc. =p
 
I think it's safe to say that there won't be a Kick-Ass 2 movie. This book has been not good IMO and the lateness didn't help matters. I jumped off back around #3. They should have never waited until the 2nd to last issue to bring Hit-Girl back to action.

At the risk of sounding like a Millar fanboy--I'm really not--I actually think KA2 has gotten a lot better in the last three issues. I was one of the loudest complaining about how mediocre the early issues were, particularly 2 and 3. But 4-6 have really picked up and delivered on what a sequel to Millar's first book should be.

Would it make a good movie? Absolutely not. But neither would have Millar's first book. Vaughn massively retooled it and deepened the story and characters just enough to make the audience care while ditching it's more gratuitous scenes. I'm sure any adaptation of KA2 would be the same. It just seems Vaughn and Goldman are sadly uninterested in making a sequel.

My gripe is that this is all pretty much a build up to the Times Squire battle we've known about since #1. It makes me doubt theres gonna be any big pay off conclusion to that, just the build up for Kick-Ass 3. You can't just make a book and build it up to a single moment and end it there, the story needs to continue and the character arcs conclude etc. =p

Again, I actually think the last three issues have been very strong for Millar. It's not written like a comic series, but as a literal story with rising action each issue. The only complaint is that in Millar's schlocky showman way that he gave away in the first issue what the climax of the story would be. But it's been building to that point quite well. I still think the story could have been condensed to 6 issues instead of 8 and would have been much tighter--especially at the beginning. Oh well.
 
Hit-Girl #1 in May
"In the story, Kick-Ass breaks his hand on a mission, and Hit-Girl is out on her own," he said, digging into the plot and its creative history. "This story takes place between 'Kick-Ass 1' and 'Kick-Ass 2.'

angry nerd of the first volume to the so-called Mother****er of book two. "Just as Dave Lizewski was the first real life superhero going out and getting caught on camera, I wanted to show the first super crime in the Hit-Girl series," Millar explained. "I thought Red Mist going out and doing the first super crime caught on tape would be quite interesting. That then inspires all his super-villain followers, but they're all really rubbish at first and it's almost more like pranks, everything just going wrong. The Kick-Ass sequel is very dark, which is something Matthew and I had talked about extending into the movie, making this 'The Empire Strikes Back,' but the Hit-Girl mini is much lighter and all the stuff with Red Mist is still pretty funny at this stage before he's spirited away from the United States. I like the idea of Red Mist going out and training with Mother Russia and this all leads into 'Kick-Ass 2,' but the main story revolves around Hit-Girl and her attempts to have a normal family life and a normal schooling after all these years in a bubble with her fanboy father and this odd, almost '80s movie view of the world.

"She's never lived with a woman before and that's interesting, a female influence in her life almost entirely upset until this point, and she has a tough time trying to relate to girls her own age. She was such a breakout in the first story, but I thought she needed more room to breath and I've had a great time with this. The fun of her in 'Kick-Ass 2' is that she's in that 'Unforgiven' mode when she won't pick up a gun. But here we get to see her cut loose between 1 and 2 before her step father catches her and tells her to stop. It's been an absolute blast to write and I've managed to get a flashback or two back to her Big Daddy days, which I absolutely love writing. Their relationship is such a lot of fun."
PS. Link contains preview pages of Kick-Ass 2 #7
 
This issue did feel like a bridge to the next. There isn't much to it. There's some good moments, but it all seems to just pass by so quick, simply because it wants to start the next chapter.
 
Kick-Ass 2 is finally over, and the only thing that crosses my mind is, when are the Hit-Girl spin-off and Kick-Ass 3 going to be released?
 
So, I read the final issue. My thoughts:

Like the rest of the series, it has some cool ideas and moments, but the execution is muddled. It feels like a really good idea that needs a Matthew Vaughn/Jane Goldman-esque revision and reimagining. Sadly, that will never happen.

What I did like is first and foremost JRjr's art. This, along with the first issue of KA2 and most of KA1, is Romita's best work in years. This issue inparticuarly for KA2 was him throwing himself completely into it. The artwork was eye-poppingly good. There were also a few really cool moments in the issue like Hit-Girl killing Mother Russia in a fight/death scene that would've made John McClane cringe. "Relax. I just wanted to make sure she's dead." :awesome:

Also, I like how Kick-Ass and The Mother****er/Red Mist turned into a couple of whiney fanboys fighting each other. Millar's RM is a true sociopath who seems to think it is entirely a game and tries to go home after thinking he and Dave are even. It may be two-dimensional writing on Millar's part, but it worked pretty well here. Also, Dave just hitting him off the building and realize he's a dumb kid in a wetsuit who just "murdered" another dumb kid was a good note. Also, his inner-monologue/speech after HG saves his ass is good about "Why the movies were created in such a dark decade." I always enjoy socio-analytical navel-gazing like that.

Still, the issue felt a bit underwhelming and anti-climactic. And that ending. That's a great twist for the middle of a book. But to use Mindy being discovered and arrested as a cliffhanger? I'm sure Millar imagines this is his Empire Strikes Back moment, but the rest of the story wasn't developed enough to feel like he deserved that. It just kind of ends in mid-story and it will likely be years before he picks up the plot thread. Also, Dave was a downright fool for calling the ambulance for Chris. I don't care how guilty he felt, but calling the police on his own cell phone while still lat the crime scene got Mindy arrested. Not to mention Chris is obviously going to say who pushed him and get Dave arrested for attempted first or second degree murder. :doh:

Still it was "OK," I guess. Certainly entertaining, but like the rest of the book not quite fulfilling. The art is great, but the writing is like a first draft to a potentially great story. Unfortunately, it takes a Matthew Vaughn to realize that potential greatness from Millar (at least as far as Kick-Ass is concerned). After all the delays, I'll wait for the graphic novel editions of Hit-Girl and Kick-Ass 3 before I try and collect them issue-by-issue again.

P.S. There were some glaring plot holes. In the comic continuity nobody knows who Hit-Girl is. She was never broadcast online and nobody knew her as a superhero celebrity of note. In this issue Mother Russia claims to have watched "some of her moves" on Youtube, Dave's BFFs know who she is and even the cops know that she's wanted "for at least 60 murders." How's that possible if the public didn't know she existed until the Times Squares fight? As I said, a gaping plot hole. Oh well.
 
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So, I read the final issue. My thoughts:

Like the rest of the series, it has some cool ideas and moments, but the execution is muddled. It feels like a really good idea that needs a Matthew Vaughn/Jane Goldman-esque revision and reimagining. Sadly, that will never happen.

What I did like is first and foremost JRjr's art. This, along with the first issue of KA2 and most of KA1, is Romita's best work in years. This issue inparticuarly for KA2 was him throwing himself completely into it. The artwork was eye-poppingly good. There were also a few really cool moments in the issue like Hit-Girl killing Mother Russia in a fight/death scene that would've made John McClane cringe. "Relax. I just wanted to make sure she's dead." :awesome:

Also, I like how Kick-Ass and The Mother****er/Red Mist turned into a couple of whiney fanboys fighting each other. Millar's RM is a true sociopath who seems to think it is entirely a game and tries to go home after thinking he and Dave are even. It may be two-dimensional writing on Millar's part, but it worked pretty well here. Also, Dave just hitting him off the building and realize he's a dumb kid in a wetsuit who just "murdered" another dumb kid was a good note. Also, his inner-monologue/speech after HG saves his ass is good about "Why the movies were created in such a dark decade." I always enjoy socio-analytical navel-gazing like that.

Still, the issue felt a bit underwhelming and anti-climactic. And that ending. That's a great twist for the middle of a book. But to use Mindy being discovered and arrested as a cliffhanger? I'm sure Millar imagines this is his Empire Strikes Back moment, but the rest of the story wasn't developed enough to feel like he deserved that. It just kind of ends in mid-story and it will likely be years before he picks up the plot thread. Also, Dave was a downright fool for calling the ambulance for Chris. I don't care how guilty he felt, but calling the police on his own cell phone while still lat the crime scene got Mindy arrested. Not to mention Chris is obviously going to say who pushed him and get Dave arrested for attempted first or second degree murder. :doh:

Still it was "OK," I guess. Certainly entertaining, but like the rest of the book not quite fulfilling. The art is great, but the writing is like a first draft to a potentially great story. Unfortunately, it takes a Matthew Vaughn to realize that potential greatness from Millar (at least as far as Kick-Ass is concerned). After all the delays, I'll wait for the graphic novel editions of Hit-Girl and Kick-Ass 3 before I try and collect them issue-by-issue again.

P.S. There were some glaring plot holes. In the comic continuity nobody knows who Hit-Girl is. She was never broadcast online and nobody knew her as a superhero celebrity of note. In this issue Mother Russia claims to have watched "some of her moves" on Youtube, Dave's BFFs know who she is and even the cops know that she's wanted "for at least 60 murders." How's that possible if the public didn't know she existed until the Times Squares fight? As I said, a gaping plot hole. Oh well.

I can understand your disappointment. I think the plot holes you are talking about will be addressed in the Hit Girl series coming out in June. Also I agree with what you said that it will be years before Miller gets back to writing kick ass 3 which in many ways sucks.
 
Millar said that each issue by Hit-Girl is bi-monthly more or less, but collected edition would be ready for Christmas market.
 
I wasn't "disappointed" per se. It's about what I expected. It's entertaining. But the movie proves it can be more.
 
It was a pretty entertaining series. I'll wait until it gets rereleased as a graphic novel in a few months to actually buy it.

I hope it gets made into a movie. That would make it even better.
 
Donald Faison has been cast as Doctor Gravity.
http://www.deadline.com/2012/08/don...ting-dr-gravitycomic-con-scrubs-nicolas-cage/

John Leguizamo has been cast as Javier, one of the Mother****er's bodyguards.
http://www.deadline.com/2012/07/john-leguizamo-sets-two-films-before-making-abc-pilot/

Kick-Ass 2 is set to release on June 28, 2013.
http://insidemovies.ew.com/2012/08/15/kick-ass-2-jurassic-park-3d-release-date/

Jim Carrey has been cast as Colonel Stars.
http://screenrant.com/jim-carrey-the-colonel-kick-ass-2/
 
A set pick came out with Mindy kissing Dave.

Chloe Moretz is a fine piece of shut yo mouth. Even if she is underage, does it make me bad for thinking this?
 
Anybody else been following Kick-Ass 3?
 
Anybody else surprised that Hit-Girl was killed?
 
Well played. I follow it because my character is in it a bunch:)
 

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