![]() For a while, you might think you’re watching a really good movie. Jim Carrey is genuinely one of the best parts of the film, even if he’s not in it that long. Yes, they’re ridiculous and violent, but they’re incredibly fun and a little inspiring at points, even bordering on too good to be true. Together, they rough up some criminals in some really great fight scenes. Meanwhile, Kick-Ass joins Justice Forever, a superhero team consisting of Jim Carrey, Turk from Scrubs, a couple straight out of Best in Show, some dude, Night Bitch, and Kick-Ass’s friend who my family insists I look just like. You, the audience, know this because every character’s line is basically a miniature soliloquy expressing exactly what they’re thinking and why. Kick-Ass 2 begins with Hit-Girl struggling over whether or not she should be proud of the training her dad, Nicolas Cage, gave her and whether or not it was worth the childhood she never had. I remember the comic “Kick-Ass 2” being a really vulgar mess that, while having a character named “The Motherfucker”, still took itself too seriously and was, overall, just really disgusting. I was pleasantly surprised by the first twenty minutes or so of Kick-Ass 2. Going into the theater, I was a little hesitant.
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