Kill Bill: Vol. 2

3.77
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    2004

    Synopsis

    The Bride unwaveringly continues on her roaring rampage of revenge against the band of assassins who had tried to kill her and her unborn child. She visits each of her former associates one-by-one, checking off the victims on her Death List Five until there's nothing left to do … but kill Bill.

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    Cast

    • Uma ThurmanBeatrix "The Bride" Kiddo
    • David CarradineBill
    • Daryl HannahElle Driver
    • Michael MadsenBudd
    • Gordon Liu Chia-huiPai Mei
    • Michael ParksEsteban Vihaio
    • Perla Haney-JardineB.B. Kiddo
    • Larry BishopLarry Gomez
    • Samuel L. JacksonRufus
    • Lucy LiuO-Ren Ishii

    Recommendations

    • 100

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Kill Bill-Vol. 2 puts to shame doubts entertained about aesthetic strategies or structural imbalance provoked by "Kill Bill-Vol. 1." Now that the entirety of Quentin Tarantino's epic revenge melodrama is on view, "Kill Bill" emerges as a brilliant, invigorating work, one to muse over for years to come.
    • 100

      Rolling Stone

      You'll thrill to the action, savor the tasty dialogue and laugh like bloody hell.
    • 100

      Variety

      Originally conceived as one film, the two-parter that has finally emerged can now be seen as a truly epic work.
    • 100

      Film Threat

      "Kill Bill Vol. 1" was a pure action movie, in love with collisions of violent movement. “Vol. 2” relaxes the pace, allowing for extended monologues. Those who lamented the first film's lack of wicked word exchanges should delight in Carradine's final soliloquy.
    • 100

      Newsweek

      A piece of spectacular silliness, but that's not meant with disrespect. The key word is spectacular.
    • 100

      The A.V. Club

      The film succeeds by expertly melding the two stages of Tarantino's career. The rambling Tarantino of "Jackie Brown" and "Pulp Fiction" is evident in every lovingly crafted and delivered monologue, each leisurely paced scene and long take. The more action-oriented, fight-intensive Tarantino reappears in the viscerally exciting bursts of ultra-violence that punctuate the stretches of dialogue.
    • 75

      ReelViews

      As it currently stands, Kill Bill is a victim of its director's ego and its distributor's greed. The moments of greatness make it worth seeing, and there's certainly plenty of entertainment to be found here, but it's hard not to lament what might have been.
    • 70

      Village Voice

      What's surprising is the atmosphere of sweet reason--elatively speaking--that distinguishes Kill Bill Vol. 2 from its bloody precursor.

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