Kick-Ass Sex Scene

Kick-Ass Sex Scene




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Kick-Ass Sex Scene
Video: Kick-Ass Deleted Scenes, Sequel Talk
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More Hit Girl, more Big Daddy and a goofy groupie sex scene between amateur superheroes and their female admirers — that’s what got left on the cutting room floor, according to Kick-Ass director Matthew Vaughn.
“There is about 18 minutes of [deleted] footage , which is really good stuff,” Vaughn told MTV News recently. “If the film is a hit, I’ll do an extended cut.”
While the R-rated Kick-Ass didn’t exactly burn up the box office on its opening weekend — barely squeaking past How to Train Your Dragon to take over the top spot, with an underwhelming $19.8 million in domestic ticket sales — the movie has more than made back its relatively modest production budget (reportedly $28 million), when international figures are considered.
And that could mean a sequel for the scrappy flick about amateur superheroes. In the video below, stars Aaron Johnson (who plays Kick-Ass) and Christopher Mintz-Plasse (Red Mist) discuss the “very dark” direction a second film would likely take.
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Rated R for strong brutal violence throughout, pervasive language, sexual content, nudity and some drug use - some involving children



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'Kick-Ass 2' director Jeff Wadlow and star Christopher Mintz-Plasse discuss the controversial scene from the 'Kick-Ass 2' comic book, and why they changed it for the movie.
The world of Kick-Ass has always been trademarked by its raunchy and violent twist on the DC/Marvel superhero universes, but readers of Mark Millar and John Romita, Jr.'s Kick-Ass 2 sequel series know that one moment in particular from the comics earned the infamous distinction of being particularly repellent and controversial . 
When production started on the Kick-Ass 2 movie , there was a lot of curiosity about how writer/director Jeff Wadlow would tackle that dark moment from the comics. Having seen the movie now, we were sure to ask Wadlow about the challenge of adapting Mark Millar's no-holds-barred source material, and why he chose to handle this particular controversial scene the way that he did in the film.
The scene in question from the comic books occurs when Chris D'Amico (under his new guise as The Motherf*cker) attacks the suburban neighborhood of Dave Lizewski/Kick-Ass' love interest, Katie Deauxma, massacres her father, and subjects the poor girl to a gruesome gang rape by his squad of evil thugs. In the film version, however, Katie has been replaced by Kick-Ass' crime-fighting comrade "Night Bitch" as the prominent love interest that The Motherf*cker assaults - and instead of a violent rape, we get a violent attempted rape that peters out (no pun) when The Motherf*cker fails to... "rise to the occasion."
It was an interesting reversal of Millar and Romita Jr.'s comic and a scene that played well with audiences (at least judging from the theater I was in). When talking to Christopher Mintz-Plasse and writer/director Jeff Wadlow, I had to pick their brains about why it was necessary to change the controversial rape scene - and then, why it was changed to the comedic moment we got in the film:
Christopher Mintz-Plasse: I love really, really dark things like if there’s a rape scene it’s gotta be a dark movie it can’t be—I just didn’t think it would fit for this movie cause you’re watching it and it’s so colorful and fun and violent and you’re laughing, you’re getting excited and I don’t think a rape scene fits that vibe. In the comic—Jeff sets it right—in the comic they are not real people so you can put a rape in there and you’re not like feeling emotion towards it it’s just people on a piece of paper. But in a movie when you have real tangible people playing these parts it gets deep and it gets heavier on a bigger scale. I just don’t think a rape scene was needed. You know in the movie “Irreversible”—have you ever seen that?
I have - not that I particularly like to recall that I have. If you've seen the movie, you'll know why; if you haven't seen it, read about it HERE .
Christopher Mintz-Plasse: How crazy is that [movie]? But that movie CAN have a rape scene cause it’s so fucking twisted and dark; a movie like 'Kick-Ass 2'... I just don’t think a rape scene was needed.
Wadlow was quick to highlight the vast differences between the comic book and movie mediums, and why what works in one, may not w
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