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April 12, 2010

KICK-ASS

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Dumb Mess
Fan Boy Pandering Goes Too Far
By Cole Smithey

ColeSmithey.comThere are actually some 45-year-old film critics who write their reviews tilted toward fan boy readers as if they have something in common with the 12-year-old brain that Hollywood considers its primary audience. With Kick Ass, fanboy culture reaches an apogee of sloppy diminishing returns intended to clearly draw a dividing line between adult fanboy poseurs and the under-17 crowd who can only get into the R-rated picture with the accompaniment of said pandering grown-up.

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Director Matthew Vaughn ("Layer Cake") oversees a dumb-ass story co-written by comic book writer Mark Millar and John S. Romita Jr. about Dave Lizewski, a New York fanboy who gets the bright idea to reinvent himself as a real-life masked avenger, ostensibly to win the heart of Katie (Lyndsy Fonseca), a girl at school who thinks he's gay. Dave proves a failure during his first outing as his green-suited alter ego Kick-Ass. The beating he takes means that his body must be surgically reinforced with metal plates.

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But even Dave's physical transformation does little to improve his tactical skills, which demand some much needed assistance from a Batman wannabe called Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) and his Robin-knock-off daughter Mindy — AKA Hit Girl (Chloe Grace Moretz). Everything from its cartoon-bad-guys, to its stoopid humor, to its sudden shocks of profanity and gory violence, spells disaster. Here is a movie that parents shouldn't take their kids to see, and that is beneath anyone over 18. Garbage.

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There's a moment during Kick-Ass's voice-over narration when he name checks Sin City to the audience as a way of telling you what to expect in an upcoming scene. It's a telling mistake the writer makes that gives the whole game away. Anyone who's seen Robert Rodriquez's and Frank Miller's unparalleled Sin City (2005) knows that Kick-Ass has positively nothing in common with that astronomically superior film. To imagine that it does is an act of delusional folly.

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In an age where kids carry on texting romances with people they rarely or never even greet face-to-face, Kick-Ass seems, at face value, like a movie about a kid who dares to step away from his computer screen in favor of interacting with the world around him.

Kick-Ass's pissed-off and bloodied expression on the poster evinces a world-weary teen who's not going to take it anymore. He doesn't give a damn about what it takes to battle the Republicans, Wall Street dogs, and technology peddlers who threaten his place as a free-thinker in a society where nobody can exist in public without being on a cell phone. But it's a lie. Because if it were that kind of movie, a movie such as "Quadrophenia" that really does represent a vital teen character desperately attempting to break out of his social traps--then the screenwriter might have to go to some trouble.

ColeSmithey.com

Kick-Ass is based on a series of comic books by Mark Millar ("Wanted") who fancies his stories as "punk-tinged." With so many "fanboy-punks," "steam-punks" and "internet-punks" buzzing around, it's easy to forget the ethics associated with the original musical movement by people who regarded the term as a cheesy way of commercially compartmentalizing their determined efforts at delivering some amount of truth to the world.

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Like the fanboy mentality that bullies with threatening e-mails, tweets, blog posts, and cell phone transmissions, Kick-Ass is a movie with no guts. The bad guys are a bunch of Keystone Cops goofing around with semi-automatic weapons. But most wrongheaded is its insulting use of 12-year-old Chloe Grace Moretz as a gun-wielding superhero who savors the word "cock" when referring to the unexplained phallic signal the Mayor aims at the sky to summon her and her crime-fighter dad.

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As a bellwether of America's societal collapse, Kick-Ass tells us that the corporate raiders who have sucked the country dry are stronger than ever. The Hollywood assembly-line film industry is only too happy to stick "3D" on movies to milk an extra five bucks from audiences who believe the hype. In the case of Kick-Ass, it only served to remind me what a great R-rated movie "Sin City" is. If you do insist on taking your kids to see "Kick-Ass," know that is a "Hard R."

Rated R. 113 mins.

Zero StarsZERO STARS

Cozy Cole

ColeSmithey.com

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