Marvel Movie Madness! Part 25: Kick-Ass

Kicking off Marvel imprint week.

Enter Marvel Movie Madness, wherein Rotten Tomatoes watches all of the significant Marvel movies ever made. Full Marvel Movie Madness list here. Tune in! We give you our thoughts, and you give us yours.


Part 25: Kick-Ass (2010, 76% @ 235 reviews)
Directed by Matthew Vaughn, starring Aaron Johnson, Nicolas Cage, Chloe Moretz, Christopher Mintz-Plasse

Alex: The question: Could America handle an ultra violent movie that glorified, and even slightly sexualized the actions of a 12-year-old femme fatale? Probably, but Matthew Vaughn never even gives us the chance. An R-rated comic book movie needs to hit and it needs to hit hard. Vaughn instead tries to soften the blow every chance he gets, overstylizing and resorting to tricks like plopping obvious pop songs over action scenes. Here's a Joan Jett song just in case you wanted to be sick of it again! The movie can be appealingly bratty but that's hardly a counter to Kick-Ass' lack of discipline: too many characters, too many meandering subplots, too many too-clever ideas it struggles to be in your face about.

Luke: Oh man, if I have to hear "Bad Reputation" lazily applied to another "girl kicking ass scene" I'm going to burn my vinyl. That song belongs to Freaks and Geeks -- not Shrek, not this; period. That said, I actually found a lot to like about Kick-Ass -- at least for the first half or so, when it was playing like a superhero Superbad. The idea that a horny, undersexed teenager decides to become a low-rent comic book avenger to raise his social status was kinda amusing, and I liked the banter between Aaron Johnson, Clark Duke and co. Also, Nicholas Cage channeling Adam West's Batman and his offbeat, borderline creepy mentor relationship with Chloe Moretz's Hit Girl was great, for a while anyway -- and I love any movie that encourages a 12-year-old girl to drop c-bombs to the horror of queasy moral guardians. I think the problem I had with the movie is that it lost its way toward the end, falling back on pretty generic shoot-'em-up sequences and an uninteresting villain (at least until Red Mist comes into his own in the sequel, if there ever is one). Mathew Vaughn didn't manage to juggle the tones of satire and action here; I think he's better suited to straight violence, because his grasp of humor often deserts him (ahem, Stardust.) The actors -- Cage, Johnson; especially Moretz, who's killer -- gave this the boost for me.


Tim: Luke, feel free to call me one of those queasy moral guardians if you must, but my objection to Hit Girl is less rooted in prudishness than in my feeling that there's really no character there -- she's a conceit, an idea, and a dicey one at that. Her dialogue sounds so written that it's impossible to believe she's a real person, even within the quasi-reality the movie portrays. I get that it's "transgressive" and "shocking" to see a little girl swearing and killing people, but that doesn't make it funny, and it sure doesn't make it exciting. When she's slaughtering a roomful of people while a punk version of The Banana Splits theme plays on the soundtrack, we know she's not in any danger, which robs the scene of tension; worse, I think we're supposed to be amused by the incongruity between the sunny tunes and the bloodshed we're witnessing, but that's been done before, and better -- remember "Jesse's Girl" in the drug-deal-gone-bad scene in Boogie Nights? Or take Kung Fu Hustle for example -- that film has triple the body count as Kick Ass, but it also has real tension and big laughs, and there's never a sense that it's winking at the audience. It also goes all the way and establishes that it exists in a hyper-real, cartoony universe, while we're never quite sure how seriously we're supposed to be taking the world of Kick Ass.

I guess what I'm saying is that the film assumes a level of emotional detachment and cynical humor that it doesn't even begin to earn. I wasn't so much offended by the content of this film as I was by its attitude; it's really sour. Take the scene in which Kick-Ass and Big Daddy are about to be executed on live TV: one of the teenage girls watching it looks away and presses herself against one of Kick-Ass's friends' shoulders, and he turns and gives the guy next to him a thumbs up -- he's about to score! It's a cheap, lame gag, but one that explains a lot about this movie.


Luke: Not at all, Tim. In fact, I tend to agree. Personally I didn't think Hit-Girl was at all as transgressive as Vaughn and his writers thought she was -- I just enjoyed the fact that some people got upset at a little girl swearing. Even in 2010. In fact, if you wanna look at a better version of this -- one with a foul mouth and a trigger-finger but character in spades -- you only have to revisit Natalie Portman's unforgettable Mathilda in The Professional (Hit-Girl/Big Daddy's relationship might just be a jokier copy of that.) I agree that Vaughn is mostly very wink-wink in his jokes -- sorry to invoke it again, but yeah, Stardust is the nadir of that kind of moviemaking -- but for me, it's the performances here that afford this one some saving grace. It doesn't pat itself on the back that much.

Ryan: I'm a little surprised that I'm in the minority here, but I had a great time watching this movie. I don't think it's a monumental achievement in comic book-based cinema, and I'm aware of its flaws, but I found it largely entertaining, possibly because I didn't really take issue with any of the problems the rest of you found in the film. Was it overstylized? I think so, yes, but I was already expecting that. Too many characters and subplots? There were a lot of them, but I wasn't left disappointed by their level of involvement in the story like I was with, for example, Spider-Man 3. Too clever? Whatever Vaughn's true aim was here, I didn't find the movie especially clever, but I also didn't feel as though it was particularly pleased by its own perceived cleverness. Too exploitative (re: Hit-Girl)? I understand the nature of this criticism, but I disagree with it and thought, if anything, the violence was potentially more objectionable.


Pop songs or not, I enjoyed most of the action sequences, right up until Kick-Ass showed up with that machine gun/jet pack strapped to his back. As far as Hit-Girl is concerned, I found all of her action scenes to be the most exciting, not due to any fetishistic tendencies, but because she looked great performing those moves; I don't know how much of it was the work of stunt people, but the fight choreography was outstanding, and that was good enough for me. Tim's right in that there wasn't much tension there, but is there ever, really, in an over-the-top action film like this? I do agree that she was more a conceit than a real character, but I thought she was ultimately given enough of a backstory to justify her presence. Also, to reiterate what I said about Ghost Rider: Nicolas Cage's peculiar mannerisms are becoming increasingly entertaining.

At the end of the day, I enjoyed Kick-Ass in much the same way I would enjoy, say, an episode of Jackass: a bit of cringing, some laughs, and several outbursts of "Oh, no they didn't!" It wasn't as funny or subversive, I think, as some have claimed and others have criticized it for pretending to be, but that didn't detract from its entertainment value for me. It's unabashedly cartoonish in so many ways, and that's all I really wanted from it.

More Marvel Movie Madness:

Comments

Manuel G.

Manuel Granados

On Kick-Ass I had the reverse fanboy effect.

Fanboyism for this movie was so high and so hyped that my expectations were on the floor, I thought I was gonna like a thing or two and that'd be it. But I was very pleasantly surprised with the result: this movie is very well made and very well acted. Hell, even Nicolas Cage is good in it.

Chloe Moretz is a pretty decent actress after seeing this one and Let me In, she just needs to be in a huge hit so she is not istracized by studios.

Jul 1 - 07:04 PM

Matanuki

Matanuki .

I'm a sucker for the humor in this film. Like the scene when the mob boss is driving down the street and sees who he thinks is Kick Ass. "What's with all the hi fives? I'll give you a hi five!"

Jul 2 - 06:50 AM

Nic Cage

Nick Cage

Wait what? Back up one minute...Even I was good in it? I;m good in all my movies motherfucka, just sometimes the movies I'm in aren't very good

Jul 8 - 11:31 AM

The.Watcher

The Watcher

Don't know what you people are talking about... Kick Ass kicked ass, simple as that.

Jul 1 - 07:09 PM

evanset6

Jason Bolinger

Agreed. Kick Ass is one of my favorite comic films ever. I don't know what movie these guys were watching, but they're idiots.

Jul 2 - 04:03 AM

bamb0o-stick

Jonathan Y

I second that. I took my friends to go see it and we all had a great time watching it. Great dark humor and action.

Jul 2 - 04:08 AM

Pammie B.

Pamela Bryant

Can I third that? It DID kick ass!!!!

Jul 2 - 05:34 PM

Legion

Travon Smith

Fuck it, fourth-ed

Jul 2 - 07:40 PM

manwithoutfearnt

Lando Hustle

fifth-ed that shit...the movie was very entertaining

Jul 3 - 12:55 AM

thefreshman

Patrick Feeney

sixth-ed

Jul 3 - 06:50 PM

Normdog

Norm Aragones

seventh-ed

Jul 3 - 08:34 PM

Zach Thomas

Zach Idiculla

eigth-ed

Jul 4 - 08:00 PM

Bertoray

berto Jeffers

nineth-ed

Jul 4 - 10:09 PM

Simply Cinema

Anders Gatten

Tenthed. Kick-Ass showed the darker side of what a real life superhero would be like without going all "Watchmen" on us.

Jul 4 - 10:53 PM

rizzyh

rizzy h

FIRST! . . . . . . sorry, i just realized that nobody claimed that number

Jul 5 - 05:25 AM

Tricky W.

Tricky Won

Guess this is why the RT editors are zine editors and not movie critics. Their opinions sound pretty similar to the worst critic on their Cream of the Crop group: Mick LaSalle. It's as if they took one intro to film class, and now expect every film they see to have a completely original story, to be morally and culturally relevant, and for all the characters to progress in their development. Wait a minute, the film actually did do all of that. The ones who look down on the Hit-girl character see the film as hinging on her transgressiveness as the key to its humor, action, and hype. But guess what? Replace her character with an adult and the film still has the same great action sequences and humor. What these guys missed is that a lot of the humor and fun in the movie came not from the transgressiveness of the hit-girl character, but rather from the over-the-top aspects of the action sequences, which could have been performed by other characters and had the same effect. However, the hit-girl character is key to the retribution storyline, which is why she's the one that performs them. Man, how do these tools get jobs at a movie site when their movie comprehension is so atrocious?

A similar film that uses over-the-top action for its humor is Starship Troopers. If you liked that film, I bet you'd like Kick-Ass. If u didn't like that film, I could see you not liking Kick-Ass.

Jul 6 - 02:48 AM

Contactsport1

M Cryderman

Agreed. This movie was cool, their rant was lame.

Jul 6 - 08:38 AM

King Crunk

King Crunk

Surprised at so much negativity on this movie. I really enjoyed it. It is not life changing by any means, but it is a very entertaining, enjoyable action movie. The fight scene between Hit Girl and the guys in the dark is fantastic, same with the one where she fights the gangsters in the hallway. I hope this does get the sequel it deserves, as it was really an entertaining, memorable, and enjoyable movie, something most movies are not.

Jul 1 - 07:09 PM

Will K.

Will K

I was honestly surprised when I saw Kick-Ass in the theater. I went to the midnight showing with only the knowledge that it's about a kid who wants to be a superhero. I think that thought is what made me want to see it, and that thought is also what made me dislike the main character as the movie went on. Males are stereotypically given the role of "protector" as we feel the need to protect our mate, home, belongings. So, I think assuming the role of "protector of the people" tends to work. The problem is as the movie goes on, you realize that Kick-Ass is pretty much a a yellow-belly and Hit-Girl is the one you want to see more of.

I can understand mentioning the lack of tension as throughout a lot of the movie, you don't feel like the characters are in much danger. However, I would argue that the warehouse rescue scene is the best scene in the movie hands-down (I've watched it too many times to count). It features the right amount of tension and action along with John Murphy's quite-overused score... oh wait, that was the Big Daddy warehouse scene. ;) (As a side note, I rather like that song from 28 Days/Weeks Later, so I don't mind) As a bit of a side rant, what is with music in movies these days? In dramatic scenes, we get awful music that can't build tension. The score was my favorite aspect of Inception (it's the only soundtrack on my phone), and while I can understand not enjoying silly pop songs, it's a shame that there was no mention of Murphy's score.

Jul 1 - 07:34 PM

Hamza A.

Hamza Ansari

I thought Kick-Ass was incredible, and a huge cut above most comic book films. These guys are being way too harsh of this film (and it's not the first time they've done so for Marvel Movie Madness) but it's the protagonist's heightened ambition, stemmed from his boredom with the ordinary and his obsession with superheroes, that drove the film's plot and threw him into the intense shitholes he finds himself in.

About Hit-Girl: firstly, I could care less if she swears (that's how most young people talk anyway when their parents aren't around) but the fact that she really wasn't in any danger during those massacre scenes was just part of establishing her and showing what she was truly capable of. It was during the climax battle between her and Frank D'Amico that put her vulnerability (which was nice to finally see) on the line, and there was the actual possibility that she could lose this one.

And sure, there were quite a few plotlines and characters, but didn't they tie together as the characters met and become involved in each other's lives, and weren't they basically resolved during the satisfying conclusion? They all ended up being after Frank D'Amico: Kick-Ass's carelessness and inexperience dropped him into that conflict, Hit Girl needed to take him down for vengeance, Red Mist was holding them back. All the characters fit into that crisis somehow, and they fit well. I thought the end conclusion did all the subplots justice.

Jul 1 - 07:36 PM

rizzyh

rizzy h

Kick-Ass was AMAZING . . . . . in fact, it was one of those films that literally shock you by showing you what a superhero movie is capable of.

I remember the scene where Kick-ass got stabbed (for no reason other than the mugger wanted to teach him a lesson) and thinking: "HOLY SHIT! . . . that would really happen in real life, wouldn't it?"

However, real life isn't very fun . . . . and certainly doesn't make for good comic book movies. So in an attempt to blend the real/gritty with the fantastic /surreal: they added Hit girl & big daddy. . . . Big daddy was just the crazed punisher-like vigilante, but Hit girl was the one with what could be considered "powers"

I realize that a LOT of people (Ebert incl.) had severe problems with Chloe pulling off such graphic murders, but frankly, not only was i fine with them . . . . towards the end when she was avenging the death of her dad (classic comic book revenge motivation), i was totally rooting for her. To me, her killings were no different than all those 90s action hero killings where the good guy (stallone, Ah-nold, Willis) would slay a seemingly endless quantity of bad guys and walk away with a "thank you" from local law enforcement. The trick is to make the audience feel for the hero's pain (losing mom, and then dad), ensuring that the bad guys are not worth shedding a tear over (interrogating one of their own by blowing him up in a lumber processor), and lastly, having the fight scenes so well-choreographed that the actual act of taking a life doesn't even register.

Now compare that to the endless degree of despair and gore perpetuated across movies like Piranha 3D, and frankly, i feel like the context in which blood is shed doesn't even matter anymore . . .. . . CGI fish graphically ripping spring breakers apart until the only thing still connecting them to their limbs are tendons (which conveniently break off as soon as a victim is pulled out of water): It's CAMP! . . . . . but pint sized girl-ninja slicing mobsters: That's MORALLY REPREHENSIBLE!

Jul 1 - 07:42 PM

Mr. Bo Ziffer

Arthur Grego

Exactly! Why would murder at the hands of a child be an issue, but not murder by an adult? It's still murder either way. But in this case, it's simulated killing, so there is no reason for people to belly ache.

Jul 2 - 08:51 AM

THEREWOLF

Markus Arbutina

I hear what your saying that "murder is murder" but it is a little different when it is a child doing the killing. I think it's so shocking because we are not numb to it. You turn on the news and all you hear about is adults murdering adults. A child doing the killing is something that is disturbing and unatural.

Jul 2 - 11:30 AM

rizzyh

rizzy h

It is disturbing and unnatural . . . . .which is why the scene in "Blood Diamond" where the main character's son is tricked into shooting a guy is so shocking and visceral . . . . . . i think people have started to focus so much on "kids" doing something or "girls" doing something that the mere act just sticks in their memory more than context. . . . for ex: men killing other men (no matter how brutally) doesn't bother me anymore, even though it should. . . . . i realized that when i watched "The Expendables" right after Piranha 3D. In the opening scene when Stallone & Co. off the Somalian Pirates, i remember thinking: Holy shit . . . . . how the hell is this any different from all the disembowelment i saw a few minutes ago? . . . . .Oh right, that involved beautiful, young females getting their faces ripped off on the beach while this is about cruel, savage pirates getting their due . . . . . context . . . . . . gotcha.

Jul 2 - 01:18 PM

Myron

Myron Kinsey

Murder is natural?

Jul 2 - 10:49 PM

The.Watcher

The Watcher

@Myron - Uh... yeah? We are animals, after all, and murder is a part of the natural cycle.

Jul 3 - 12:43 AM

Myron

Myron Kinsey

oh I dint see it like that lol guess you're right

Jul 3 - 02:27 PM

Dave J

Dave J

Film critic Roger Ebert didn't like the sensationism and the glorification inflicted of killing by underage kids, but as a realist - I didn't like the delusional message upon comic geeks that they can be crime fighters too without consistent exercising and training because after Hit Girl trains with her dad- she goes and eats a sundae, because in real life especially Olympic atheletic gymnists- they wouldn't necessarily go and eat a sundae and are also incapable to do half of the acrobats what Hit Girl performed on this film means that this film enjoys mocking atheletes and Chinese monks who train day and night! Also, what was 'never' revealed was how did Hit Girl were able to find and locate where her dad had been tied up, after being shot through a window wearing a bullet proof vest- was their a tracer or a tracker there somehwere! Also every action sequence shown on Kick-Ass was either already shown or better shown on other films from "RoboCop" to "Kill Bill Vol 1" to "The Matrix" with the only diference that "it" was underage kids instead of adults doing those action scenes. One last thing wrong with the end of "Kick Ass' is that I've seen people who use real 'jet packs' on live tv (The Jimmy Kimmel Show)and in terms of using one, one would need full extensive training because it's no piece of cake, and that scene about shooting through the window was obviously echoed from "The Matrix" when Neo was shooting through the glass while on a helicopter except that "The Matrix" looks more realistic and more cool even though much of it is CGI!

Jul 5 - 02:59 PM

BLaCKWoLF

BLaCKWoLF .

@ Dave - Even though I love Ebert, my main problem with him is that he harshly criticizes some films for certain things, whilst praising others for doing the exact same thing. That's why I can't take some of his reviews seriously, even though I still find them entertaining to read.

He didn't like Kick Ass because of its portrayal of violence or violent acts committed by children, yet he loved City of God?

(Hope that you can forgive me for my random rant lol)

Jul 7 - 06:08 AM

Dave J

Dave J

Take my word for it, your 'critism' or opinion is no rant, but you're forgetting one thing is the labelling since they're two different type of films or two different genres, while "Kick-Ass" is labelled as action/adventure aka "R" rated 'super heroes' mode, set in a developed country as the good ol USA, since they're so few "R" rated fictional super hero films, while "City of God" is drama based on fact because in some impoverished areas around Uganda or Africa(I forget) in terms of actual history, some kids are even "forced" to shoot their own parents(Take my word for it, I even seen this on the news- it was either "Nightline" or some other. In some impoverished countries, violence inflicted upon kids is based on fact and 'City of God' is an example of one of them, and is not even the the most gruesome thing I had ever saw, too!

Jul 7 - 12:34 PM

BLaCKWoLF

BLaCKWoLF .

Thanks, Dave. You're right, it's unfair to even try and compare the two, especially considering the nature of their respective subject matter. I think I may have been too quick to jump to a conclusion, even though I should have known better.

Jul 7 - 04:26 PM

Dave J

Dave J

And while you're right that both films are about 'violence and underage kids', "City of God" is a realistic portrayl similar to what one could see in real life like the massacre that happened to Columbine, while Kick-Ass is 100 % pretentious, especially the jet-pack shooting scene! In my opinion, no one cannot be a super hero by becoming comic geeks- I just thought it does send a wrong message to some kids who don't exercise and read comic books all day and in some retrospects can lead one to become delusional!

Jul 7 - 06:21 PM

Lenny M.

Lenny Monroe

Kick Ass was a good film, an unusual way of looking at superheroes in the real world. It felt like a Quentin Tarantino-lite movie. I loved it.

Jul 1 - 07:57 PM

staindslaved

Matthew Younker

I'm just going to say it, I hated this movie. I know the critics liked it and the general consensus is that it's very good and I'll admit I'm in the minority but I just didn't like it at all. I thought going in that it was going to be a comedy with a superhero twist. I never expected the hyper-violence found in the film, not that I had any problem with that but I was expecting a few laughs. Didn't care about the lead, his girlfriend or the kid from Superbad. Only decent point was the little girl character. Felt the film to be campy, poorly made, and lacking any compelling reason for it's existence. One of the worst movies I saws in 2011, again just my opinion I know lots of people loved this.

P.S. I love Matthew Vaughn since his british gangster roots but this was a real low point for me.

P.P.S. Wasn't this forum supposed to come out on Monday?

P.P.P.S. Also, I don't care how they spin it, this isn't a marvel property.

Jul 1 - 08:01 PM

Jason B.

Jason B

I'm not a big fan of this either but how is this not a Marvel property? It is based on a comic that was created and published by Marvel comics. This would not exist if not for the Marvel comic. I don't follow your logic on that point.

Jul 1 - 08:34 PM

manwithoutfear19

Daniel Raimondi

it came out last year but yeah it sorta sucked

Jul 1 - 08:48 PM

Justin D.

Justin D.

Glad to see I'm not the only one here that's not a fan.

Jul 1 - 10:06 PM

staindslaved

Matthew Younker

yes 2010, sorry my bad

I guess I should have done my research before posting. While Marvel did produce this it's not part of the Marvel superhero cannon. Similarly how A Goofy Movie or Return of Jafar are not considered part of Disney's cannon with Bambi and The Lion King. It just sticks out on this list, when I rank Marvel films I never include this.

Jul 2 - 11:09 AM

Noah James

Noah Kinsey

Watch the movie again, now that you know what it will be like. I COMPLETELY understand going thinking you'll see one thing and then getting something else, and hating it. In college, I was in the mood for a fun comedy so I borrowed a movie from a friend. I thought, hey it's a Kevin Smith movie, so I bet I'll laugh a bunch! So I turned on Chasing Amy. Long story short, once it was over I was depressed as shit for the rest of the night. Years later I watched it and quite enjoyed it. Maybe you'll have the same effect with Kick-Ass.

Jul 2 - 12:43 PM

reelguy

Jeremiah Rancourt

I did see it again after watching it the first time with the expectation of a comedy and disliking the film. On second viewing, the film is much better and one can appreciate the subplots connecting to the main plot, the performances, and the incredible action scenes. I'm really surprised that the RT guys didn't like this film, but I guess they're being consistently "prudish" after their poo-pooing of the second Punisher film.

Overall, I think 2/3-3/4 of the Marvel films the RT guys didn't like (its almost as if their not superhero fans). Maybe they need to move the bell curve to give some of these films a "passing" grade and not be so damn harsh.

Jul 5 - 11:31 AM

Dave J

Dave J

I'm one of few who didn't like this film as well, because of it's inconsistency

Jul 4 - 12:57 PM

Dave J

Dave J

I mean inconsistency and plotholes!

Jul 4 - 03:40 PM

Brian B.

Brian Barreto

I'm surprised with the RT editors on this film. I, for one, loved Kick-Ass. It was gleefully--and unapollegetic--brutal and it had a simple but enganging story that was livened up by over-the-top characters and exciting action, even though the music could be a little bit distracting. All in all, I thought this was the best superhero film of last year, to be honest. I throughly enjoyed this film more than Iron Man 2, but that's a story for another day.

*P.S.-I agree with The Watcher. "Kick-Ass kicked ass, simple as that." Well said...well said. xD

Jul 1 - 08:07 PM

rizzyh

rizzy h

Personally: both Kick-ass & Scott Pilgrim > Iron Man 2

Jul 1 - 08:14 PM

Matanuki

Matanuki .

agreed.

Jul 2 - 06:50 AM

Kaotik

Rowan Chevalier

I also agree this movie is "kick ass". Sure, it wasn't perfect, but it was thoroughly enjoyable. seriously, I don't know how these idiots can find all sorts of things to like about spiderman 3, then have so many complaints about this one. It was fun! it was big, loud, and audacious! and it had a good time doing it! just enjoy it for what it is, it wasn't trying to be an art piece.

Jul 1 - 08:23 PM

Odd E.

Odd Even

RT editors are officially douches now. This is one of the best comic book movies I've seen and I've pretty much have seen them all.

Jul 1 - 08:55 PM

Alexson Philip

Alexson Philipiah

their not douches, they just stated their opinions.

Jul 1 - 10:00 PM

Matanuki

Matanuki .

Who's more the douchebag, them for not liking Kick Ass or you for calling them names because of it?

Jul 2 - 06:52 AM

Odd E.

Odd Even

None Mat, because you just showed me that you're a bigger douche than me and them.

Thanx

Jul 4 - 03:40 PM

filmfanatic

Chris Stanton

I enjoyed this movie. Sure it thought it was a little more sadistic than it actually was and annoyingly took pleasure in itself for it's over the top deletions of violence, but other than that it's just about everything you could ask for from a comic book movie

Jul 1 - 09:03 PM

-apocolyptic-

chris armit

: Could America handle

Wow douchebag. america became the only country/continent on this planet?

Jul 1 - 09:23 PM

Noah James

Noah Kinsey

CHill. America was the primary audience for this movie. Hence why they said that.

Jul 2 - 12:45 PM

Gordon Franklin Terry Sr

Gordon Terry

That's how Americans think though: America is the only country in the universe. . . me too sometimes. When China buys General Motors within 30 years from now, Americans will have a different perspective.

Jul 4 - 11:35 AM

Luvagoo

Tallulah Robinson

If you live in a country outside the US of A, you get used to it.

"Oh no, the aliens are coming to earth, the entire NATION is in peril!!"

Yawn.

Jul 13 - 05:02 AM

What's Hot On RT

Total Recall
Total Recall

Movies Directed by Tyler Perry

Summer Movie Guide
Summer Movie Guide

Blockbuster news and reviews

The East Trailer
The East Trailer

Ellen Page in an intriguing new thriller

24 Frames
24 Frames

A gallery of classic books on film

Help | About | Jobs | Critics Submission | API | Licensing | Mobile