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Kill Bill: Vol. 2

Kill Bill: Vol. 2

  • Status: Released
  • 16-04-2004
  • Runtime: 136 min
  • Score: 7.875
  • Vote count: 14024

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.

Uma Thurman

Beatrix Kiddo / The Bride / 'Black Mamba' / Mommy

David Carradine

Bill 'Snake Charmer'

Daryl Hannah

Elle Driver 'California Mountain Snake'

Michael Madsen

Budd 'Sidewinder'

Gordon Liu Chia-Hui

Johnny Mo / Pai Mei

Michael Parks

Earl McGraw / Esteban Vihaio

Perla Haney-Jardine

B.B.

Vivica A. Fox

Vernita Green 'Copperhead'

Ambrosia Kelley

Nikki

James Parks

Edgar McGraw

Jonathan Loughran

Trucker

Michael Bowen

Buck

Kenji Ohba

Bald Guy

Yoshiyuki Morishita

Tokyo Businessman

Jun Kunimura

Boss Tanaka

Goro Daimon

Boss Honda

Kazuki Kitamura

Boss Koji / Crazy 88

Akaji Maro

Boss Ozawah

Shun Sugata

Boss Benta

Sachiko Fujii

The 5, 6, 7, 8's

Yoshiko Yamaguchi

The 5, 6, 7, 8's

Ronnie Yoshiko Fujiyama

The 5, 6, 7, 8's

Sakichi Sato

Charlie Brown

Tetsuro Shimaguchi

Crazy 88

Yoji Tanaka

Crazy 88

Sō Yamanaka

Crazy 88

Issey Takahashi

Crazy 88

Juri Manase

Crazy 88

Chiaki Kuriyama

Gogo

Yuki Kazamatsuri

Proprietor

Lucy Liu

O-Ren Ishii 'Cottonmouth'

Sonny Chiba

Hattori Hanzo

Julie Dreyfus

Sofie Fatale

Bo Svenson

Reverend Harmony

Jeannie Epper

Mrs. Harmony

Stephanie L. Moore

Joleen

Shana Stein

Erica

Caitlin Keats

Janeen

Christopher Allen Nelson

Tommy Plympton

Samuel L. Jackson

Rufus

Reda Beebe

Lucky

Sid Haig

Jay

Larry Bishop

Larry Gomez

Laura Cayouette

Rocket

Clark Middleton

Ernie

Claire Smithies

Clarita

Helen Kim

Karen

Victoria Lucai

Trixie

Venessia Valentino

1st Grade Teacher

Thea Rose

Melanie Harrhouse

William Paul Clark

Soda Jerk

Stevo Polyi

Tim

Al Manuel Douglas

Marty Kitrosser

Patricia Silva

Hooker #1

Maria Del Rosario Gutierrez

Hooker #2

Sonia Angelica Padilla Curiel

Hooker #3

Veronica Janet Martinez

Hooker #4

Lucia Cruz Marroquin

Hooker #5

Citlati Guadalupe Bojorquez

Hooker #6

Graciela Salazar Mendoza

Hooker #7

Maria de Lourdes Lombera

Hooker #8

Jorge Silva

Bartender / Pimp

Wuchak

Tarantino's amusing super-assassin bizarro world RELEASED IN 2004 and written/directed by Quentin Tarantino, "Kill Bill Vol. 2" completes the story of 2003's "Vol. 1" and fills in the holes. Former assassin, The Bride (Uma Thurmon), seeks vengeance after the murder of her fiancé & friends at a wedding rehearsal in El Paso. She takes on formidable thugs Budd (Michael Madsen) and Elle (Daryl Hannah) to finally get to ringleader Bill (David Carradine). Gordon Liu plays master martial artist Pai Mei while Michael Parks is on hand as Esteban Vihaio. This part of the duology is more dialogue-driven than "Vol. 1,” fleshing-out the characters and answering many questions. Such as: How is The Bride such an unconquerable fighter? How did Elle lose her right eye? Why did Bill conduct the wedding massacre? How does Budd spend his retirement? The problem is that the characters are all cartoony caricatures, and merciless assassins to boot. It's impossible to give criminal scum "more depth," at least as far as caring for them goes. Let 'em all kill each other for all I care. Moreover, the story is too shallow to warrant such epic treatment and would've been more effective if both films were condensed into a 2.5 hour flick, cutting out the fat. Still, the movie's so offbeat that it's entertaining in the manner of 1996's "Mojave Moon," but better. It's an interesting combo of spaghetti Westerns, 70's martial arts flicks, Bond-isms and all-around Tarantino quirkiness. But suggesting that the "Kill Bill" flicks are cinematic masterpieces of auteurism is overdoing it. Take, for instance, the ridiculous closing credits, which run well over 12 minutes: The plot and characters are unworthy of such pretentious veneration. If you want masterworks by Tarantino, see “Django Unchained” (2012) and “Pulp Fiction” (1994); or even “Inglourious Basterds” (2009) and “Jackie Brown” (1997). Still, the movie's strangely amusing, the cast is good (especially Carradine) and Bill's Superman analysis is insightful. The Bride’s training with Pai Mei is arguably the best bit. THE MOVIE RUNS 137 minutes and was shot in Southern California; Beijing, China; and Mexico. GRADE: B/B- (6.5/10)

CinemaSerf

This is so much better than volume one. The "Bride" (Uma Thurman) is continuing her quest to avenge herself on the killer of her fiancée and unborn child, but unlike with the first outing we do not face more endless ensemble fight scenes. This is much more focussed and individual. Her encounter with "Sidewinder" (Michael Madsen) tests her mettle - and her panic control in a frighteningly claustrophobic manner - before the eyepatch sporting Daryl Hannah ("Elle") offers probably her finest on-screen performance as together they manage to demolish a motor home using samurai swords and their body weight. We learn more about how she learned her ninja skills under the guise of the curmudgeonly swordsmith and master of all things cerebral "Hattori Hanzo" (Sonny Chiba) and all of this builds up to a quirky denouement with her nemesis - the eponymous "Bill" (David Carradine) who reminded me throughout of his days as "Grasshopper" in "Kung Fu". It flies along, this film, with bags of one-to-one action, humour, a decent soundtrack and some interesting historical and cultural undertones that help ground the film more effectively. In my view it is easily the best role Thurman has had to play, and this second outing gives her far more scope to shine as an actor. The writing isn't great - especially towards the end, but that doesn't matter as the escapades, action and strong characters more than compensate for that. My favourite Tarantino film - easily.