How many of you wanted to dress up as super-heroes and kick some ass as a kid? Hell, I still want to as an adult. Sure, I'm a pacifist and probably wouldn't hurt a fly, but the fact remains that I've fantasized plenty about putting on a costume and taking it to the criminal underworld. My guess is that anyone who's read a comic book or watched a comic book movie has had this inclination. But one comic book I've read made me feel like that more than any other: Mark Millar and John Romita, Jr.'s Kick-Ass.
It tells the story of Dave Lizewski, a teenager just like any other, only more so. He lives in our world, the real world, with comic books and consequences for ridiculous behavior, but that doesn't stop him from buying a wetsuit on eBay and taking to the streets to fight crime.
Sure, he gets his ass kicked and a knife in his gut and a long convalescence in the hospital to show for it, but it was a hell of a rush. As soon as he mended, he went out again, but this time he did the ass-kicking and some kids captured the action on a cell-phone camera. One quick upload to YouTube later and the story is set for some of the most outrageous, bloody fun you've ever seen in a comic book.
The great thing about the book was that it was made with no compromises. Since no publisher was involved and Millar and Romita were working for free, they could do what they want.
Then Matthew Vaughn stepped in. He's the director of the film (and also Layer Cake and Stardust). He swooped in, bought the option with his own money with the intention of making Kick-Ass his next movie. The only problem was that no studio would touch the film. You see, one of the heroes that sprouts into the limelight after Kick-Ass reaches the height of popularity is Hit-Girl. She's 11, swears like a sailor, and kills more people more gruesomely than The Bride in Kill Bill. (She was trained by her father, Big Daddy, an ex-cop with a brutal sense of justice played in the film by Nicolas Cage.)
Since no studio would finance it, Vaughn put his money where his mouth was and financed the whole thing entirely between him and some friends. And so the movie was made with the same carefree, no compromises attitude as the comic.
The result is the film that comes out on Friday, but it seems as though people have never heard of it.
I have so much enthusiasm for the story and the film, I want to ask you to go see it to be a true patron of the arts and independent cinema.
And it needs all the help it can get. It's rated R, it's independent, and based on an independent comic book. If you don't support this movie, how many more R-rated comic book movies do you think we'll see?
Trust me in advance, the word of mouth on this movie is going to be huge, but unless there's a strong showing opening weekend, there won't be anywhere to go see it on the second weekend. And as soon as we get into May, forget about it. At that point, Iron Man 2 takes over the world.
Do yourself (and the creators) a favor and check it out. Go to your local comic book store and pick up the graphic novel (or get it on Amazon). Then watch the trailer to the film. And then buy yourself a ticket for the movie.
And if you're still interested, I did interviews with the creators for Big Shiny Robot! Mark Millar and John Romita, Jr. were kind enough to talk to me about the book and the movie, and the time Mark Millar tried to imbibe whiskey through his ocular cavity...
In any case, I hope to see you at the movies this weekend!
(Kick-Ass is published by Marvel in the US and Titan Books in the UK)
Bryan Young is the editor of Big Shiny Robot! and the producer of Killer at Large
Follow Bryan Young on Twitter: www.twitter.com/swankmotron
I grew up with Bewitched, Mrs. Peele and Julia (with Diahann Carroll)...a steady diet of all three. I thought women were supposed to be independent, smart, strong and educated. And KICK ASS when they needed to.
OT, but not really...My favourite game to play with my two boy friends was Batman. I never got to play Batman. I was always p/ssed about that.
My home life was such that my fantasy world involved kicking ass by the time I was eleven.
And by the time I was eleven I knew every word a sailor did and every position, too. Not personally, but that's another story.
It's been a long time coming, this new, eleven year old heroine of mine. I adore her. If she were around back then, I would have foregone my beloved Batman and been HER instead. I think it would have been cathartic. It is now.
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100414/REVIEWS/100419986
('Kick-Ass' sounds like it's a movie for folks who also thought 'The Dark Knight' was quality entertainment; I'm not one of those people. I love fantasy and comic books, I just didn't think 'The Dark Knight' was fun AT ALL. My idea of a good time is not sitting and watching the horrors of the world presented via a super-slick snuff film and calling it "cool" - I call that type of moviemaking "beyond lame".)
In this case, Vaughn lifts the material to a much higher art. This film...is excellent.
Isn't that what they said when "Sin City" came out? And "Watchmen?"
I think the studio distributing it is making a bit of a mistake in marketing it. All of the adverts scream teen movie. I wish the movie was actually sold to young adults instead of kids.
These bad boys are teetering on the edge of extinction.
"Watchmen" cost a lot more to make, $130,000,000 (estimated), and did not make the money back at the box office domestically making $107,509,799 before international box office and dvd figures.
I'm sure after all is said and done these movies did more than break even, which is never bad for a movie with an R rating these days. Throw in sales of the graphic novels on top and you've got a bonafide hit on your hands.
Here are some more figures for recent comic book movies that weren't slapped with an R rating:
"X-Men Origins: Wolverine": Cost $150,000,000 Box Office $179,883,016
"Ghost Rider": Cost $110,000,000 Box Office $115,802,596
"Superman Returns": Cost $209,000,000 Box Office $200,069,408
"The Incredible Hulk": Cost $150,000,000 Box Office $134,518,390
As you can see these movies weren't exactly box office smashes and all of those movies had the help of A List actors and built in fanbases already. Not ever comic book movie is going to be a "Dark Knight" or "Spiderman 2" level smash.
In regards to your final comment about rated R comic books being turned into movies how man examples can you really site before "Sin City?" Maybe "Fritz the Cat" but it's not like they have a long history.
J
I know I am. And I love Neil LaBute to death, but Frank Oz's film did not need to be remade.
Sheesh.
Which kids?
Me? As an eleven year old?
Do the critics of this character have ANY idea how many of us eleven year old girls need a girl avenger as a role model??? Do you not have a clue about the actual stats of what happens to soooooo many girls, not just the world over, but here, in North America too?
Look, I wouldn't let my ten year old daughter see this movie at age ten, because her life just wasn't that way. The same way as mine. But I would let ME see it at age ten.