Kill Bill Vol. 2 with Uma Thurman: Blu-ray Cover

    Kill Bill Vol. 2
    a.k.a. Kill Bill, Part 2 Director: Quentin Tarantino Cast: Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Michael Madsen, Daryl Hannah

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    • Blu-ray Release Date: 09/09/2008
    • Original Release: 2004
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 14,695
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    Viewer Rating: (43 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Sexy" See All

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    DVD - Wide Screen$13.49
    UMD for Sony PSP$9.99
     
    • Overview
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    • Scenes
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    Scenes

    Features

    The making of Kill Bill Volume 2; "Damoe" deleted scene; "Chingon" musical performance

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    Editorial Reviews

    The adventures of the Bride (Uma Thurman) continue in Kill Bill Volume 2, the second half of Quentin Tarantino's audacious homage to Hong Kong cinema and the wildly outré potboilers of the drive-in era. Originally intended as the second half of one long film, the sequel picks up where Kill Bill left off, with two members of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad dispatched and two more standing between the vengeance-seeking Bride and her former lover and mentor, the quietly philosophical Bill (David Carradine). Volume 2, while not quite as action-packed as its predecessor, is every bit as entertaining in the same over-the-top manner, yet full of the pop culture-spouting dialogue that was missing in Volume 1. The standout sequence is the much-anticipated showdown between the Bride and Elle Driver, the eye patch-wearing assassin played with delicious malevolence by Daryl Hannah. It's a set piece that literally brings the house down. Hannah is absolutely terrific, as is the willowy Thurman, who looks better than she ever has on film -- when she's not drenched in blood, that is. But the top acting honors go to Carradine, whose lengthy banishment to the cinematic outlands of direct-to-video schlock made people forget how good he could be. Tarantino's writing and direction is predictably self-indulgent, but every frame of Kill Bill: Volume 2 is suffused with his love of cinema -- and not just cinema spelled with a capital C. Mr. Q is nothing if not egalitarian, cinematically speaking, and the movie's baroque styling reflects influences you'll never find cited by stuffy academics. This is joyfully exuberant filmmaking at its least restrained, a free-form triumph of style over substance -- and very likely the most exhilarating disc you'll see for some time. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    Unforgettable!by MrsMag

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    September 21, 2009: Once again, Tarantino amazed his audience. Kill Bill was originally written as one complete film, but because the studio said it would be too long for a modern audience, Tarantino had to concede and split the movie in half. This is probably why the first scene of Volume 2 is kinda cheesy - he had already filmed the entire movie and then had to find a way to split it and have two different release dates. I always laugh a little during the first scene of Uma Thurman talking to the camera while she's driving. It is rumored that this was Quinton's way of thumbing his nose at the studio execs for making him split the movie - he knew there was no cool way to split the movie, so he just added in this scene to catch everybody up on the first half and he notoriously made it cheesy to show the studio that they had made a big mistake when they forced him to split it. As far as the rest of Vol. 2 goes, it is every bit as good as Vol. 1, plus some. I always seem to forget while watching Vol. 1 that certain scenes are in Vol. 2, so I can never just watch the one without the other immediately after. (At least in the same weekend!) Very highly recommended.

    This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.

    I Also Recommend: Reservoir Dogs, The Birds, Psycho, Midnight Cowboy, Pulp Fiction.

    Very goodby Anonymous

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    April 12, 2007: Kill Bill 2 is awsome. But it could have been a bit more gorrior. But it was still awsome

    This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.


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