Yeah, that is kinda why I was somewhat let down by the ending of the movie, because of the added over-the-top elements.
As I mentioned before, I liked how they fleshed out the characters of Red Mist and D'Amico in the movie, where they were basically card board characters in the comic. It gave the movie a more rounded feeling that wasn't present in the comic (since the entire comic was pretty much from Kick-Ass's point of view). However, I have to disagree with Red Mist being nerdier in the movie. Granted, he wasn't as bad ass as depicted in the movie ("stopping" more crime and such), but I wouldn't necessarly call him nerdier than Kick-Ass. I think, because he was played by McLovin', that actor wil always have that nerdy stigma attached to him, even if he every plays James Bond.
With Big Daddy, the comic origin works in the comic. If his origin was the same in a movie for general audiences, the audience would probably react negatively towards him since he is basically just picking on the mob for no good reason other than to do it. Granted, the mob is bad, but it would be hard to empathize with what basically boils down to a crazed killer.
However, though the emotional scene in the movie was very well done, I do like how in the comic, Hit-Girl went unfazed by Big Daddy's death until after the "job was done", so to speak. It kinda shows how crazy she is!
Whaa? Those where in the comic as well. The book also had a hoard of "recent" comic references (admittingly, for us comic fans), so Kick-Ass always had a modern edge to it.
Secondly, the movie did something really clever, I thought, which reminded me of the movie 'Adaptation'. The comic felt like more of a straight send-up of superhero stories... while the movie, as it went on, slowly but surely *became* the movie it was lampooning - and i'm pretty sure this was a deliberate choice. Big Daddy's comic book-y origin, bazookas, and eventually jetpacks. By the end, when Kick-Ass and Hit-Girl are jetpacking through the city, it's the equivalent of Spider-Man wooshing through NYC, it's the "hero has arrived" moment. Kick-Ass really can fly. Metamorphosis complete. It's not "putting down" superhero movies, it's lovingly embracing them by the end.
I'm talking about a contemporary edge that was relatable to normal, modern audiences. The addition of MySpace, YouTube, Kick-Ass taking pictures of himself with his camera phone, all of that stuff was missing from the book yet added for the film.
But the MySpace and YouTube stuff was in the book. In fact, the reason Kick-Ass has issues with Red Mist at first was because RM was being credited as the first superhero with a MySpace though KA did it already.
YouTube was connected with Kick-Ass before the first issue came out as a viral "home video" of a costumed hero helping someone to generate interest in the comic.
The movie didn't add those things. They were already there. Reread issues 2 & 3.
Finally saw this, and thought it was decently entertaining, but not much more. From all the talk beforehand, I was expecting something a LOT more daring and original.
^ Why didn't you just pick up the hardcover? Or did you and are referring to the issue within the hardcover? If so just ignore me.
Kick-Ass is more of what Mystery Men or even Hancock could have been with some vision and daring.
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