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IMDbPro

Kill Bill: Volumen 2

Título original: Kill Bill: Vol. 2
  • 2004
  • 18
  • 2h 17min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,0/10
844 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
1278
265
Uma Thurman in Kill Bill: Volumen 2 (2004)
CT #1, post
Reproducir trailer2:20
9 vídeos
99+ imágenes
¿CrimenAcciónAcción de una persona contra el mundoArtes marcialesKung-FuThriller

La novia continúa su búsqueda de venganza contra su antiguo jefe y amante Bill, el solitario portero Budd y la traicionera Elle, tuerta.La novia continúa su búsqueda de venganza contra su antiguo jefe y amante Bill, el solitario portero Budd y la traicionera Elle, tuerta.La novia continúa su búsqueda de venganza contra su antiguo jefe y amante Bill, el solitario portero Budd y la traicionera Elle, tuerta.

  • Dirección
    • Quentin Tarantino
  • Guión
    • Quentin Tarantino
    • Uma Thurman
  • Reparto principal
    • Uma Thurman
    • David Carradine
    • Michael Madsen
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    8,0/10
    844 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    1278
    265
    • Dirección
      • Quentin Tarantino
    • Guión
      • Quentin Tarantino
      • Uma Thurman
    • Reparto principal
      • Uma Thurman
      • David Carradine
      • Michael Madsen
    • 1.1KReseñas de usuarios
    • 325Reseñas de críticos
    • 83Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 23 premios y 84 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos9

    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Trailer 2:19
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Trailer 2:20
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Trailer 2:20
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    How 'Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood' Connects the TarantinoVerse
    Clip 5:09
    How 'Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood' Connects the TarantinoVerse
    25 Years After 'Pulp Fiction', Tarantino Delivers a 'Hollywood' Masterwork
    Clip 3:13
    25 Years After 'Pulp Fiction', Tarantino Delivers a 'Hollywood' Masterwork
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Featurette 1:45
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2
    Promo 0:16
    Kill Bill: Vol. 2

    Imágenes242

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    + 237
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    Reparto principal68

    Editar
    Uma Thurman
    Uma Thurman
    • Beatrix Kiddo aka The Bride aka Black Mamba aka Mommy
    David Carradine
    David Carradine
    • Bill aka Snake Charmer
    Michael Madsen
    Michael Madsen
    • Budd aka Sidewinder
    Daryl Hannah
    Daryl Hannah
    • Elle Driver aka California Mountain Snake
    Vivica A. Fox
    Vivica A. Fox
    • Vernita Green aka Copperhead
    Ambrosia Kelley
    Ambrosia Kelley
    • Nikki
    • (as Ambrosia Kelly)
    Michael Parks
    Michael Parks
    • Earl McGraw…
    James Parks
    James Parks
    • Edgar McGraw
    Jonathan Loughran
    Jonathan Loughran
    • Trucker
    Michael Bowen
    Michael Bowen
    • Buck
    Kenji Ôba
    Kenji Ôba
    • Bald Guy
    • (as Kenji Oba)
    Yoshiyuki Morishita
    Yoshiyuki Morishita
    • Tokyo Businessman
    • (as Yoshijuki Morishita)
    Jun Kunimura
    Jun Kunimura
    • Boss Tanaka
    Gorô Daimon
    Gorô Daimon
    • Boss Honda
    • (as Goro Daimon)
    Kazuki Kitamura
    Kazuki Kitamura
    • Boss Koji…
    Akaji Maro
    Akaji Maro
    • Boss Ozawah
    Shun Sugata
    Shun Sugata
    • Boss Benta
    The 5.6.7.8's
    • The 5.6.7.8's
    • Dirección
      • Quentin Tarantino
    • Guión
      • Quentin Tarantino
      • Uma Thurman
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios1.1K

    8,0843.8K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    9Coventry

    Tarantino's Triumph: Volume Two

    Rarely known a movie I've been looking forward to so much than Q.T's resumption of the Kill Bill saga. I, as well as millions of others film-freaks, awaited Uma Thurman's further adventures with wicked anticipation. And of course…Tarantino didn't disappoint. Volume two is a completely different movie than volume one, but it's equally brilliant and the director's trademarks are shown more than obviously. Volume one merely was homage to the Eastern Martial Arts movies, with delightfully over-the-top splatter and gore while Vol. 2 fully focuses on ancient westerns and rural horror. There's more dialogue, more twists ‘n turns and the anti-chronological structure results in more depth and involvement. Some unexplained elements from Vol.1 become clear now and even the entire background of Thurman's character gets unveiled. For the very first time, (as far as I can remember) Tarantino really knows how to create an unbearable tension! There's a sequence in which Uma is buried alive and trapped under the ground…Through simple methods, like a completely black screen, Tarantino arises claustrophobia among the audience! Truly terrific filmmaking.

    The actors in Kill Bill aren't Hollywood's best, but they each have their charisma and their typical Tarantino characters do the rest. The camera viewpoints are brilliant at times and – as usual – the tiny absurd elements are a joy to discover. Tarantino's entire Kill Bill achievement may easily be considered as one of the most creative and dared film-projects ever! Do yourself a favor and watch them! …Over and over again.
    10abacus24

    A Tarantino Masterpiece

    Over the last 40 years, I've seen a lot of movies. All types. Some great, some good and some mostly inedible; most left my breath with a sour smell. Westerns, sci-fi, comedies, dramas, etc. After seeing Kill Bill Vol I, I assumed that any sequel would pale to its predecessor. I, of course, was premature in my prediction. The movie was, by all means, a classic. I feel Taratino was really trying to make a great movie versus making money for his producers. To build his tasty sandwich, he took the lessons he learned from life as a movie maker and cleverly managed to meld some slices of meat from Sergio Leone (subtly), Akira Kurosawa (very subtly) and, I'm stretching it here, Ridley Scott, to create a great sequel to an excellent first movie. He used some great, almost forgotten actors (Daryl Hannah, Micheal Parks, and David Carradine to create a memorable meal. It was only a sandwich, but what morsel it was. I was full and wanting more. Very rare to find this type of film in our corporate world. He must wield some real power in the movie world. I don't know of anyone who has saw this movie who hasn't given it great feedback. And I know all types of viewers. My wife, who really doesn't like anything that is not overly melancholy or dripping with sentimentality, actually liked the whole movie. That in itself is an endorsement. Well done. Mr. Tarantino, you will be hard placed to match this gem.
    no_math9

    Different Yes, Bad, No

    This movie is completely different from the first. Unlike the first with fast paced action and extreme entertainingly super-stylish gore, Kill Bill vol. 2 is everything that was missing in th first.

    The Bride's revenge is burning strong and we can see it in her eyes. We discover the truth behind the wedding massacre and all questions from the 1st movie are answered. We discover why the Bride is the deadliest woman in the world. We discover why Elle is missing an eye. We discover who Bill really is. We discover the Brides name. And finally we discover the truth of the secret revealed at the end of Vol. 1.

    Her first target is Budd. The loser bum ex-deadly assassin living in a trailer in the middle of nowhere. The short confrontation ends with one of the most terrifyingly claustrophobia-inducing (sp?) scenes ever...specially if you watch it in the dark. Then we are taken to the journey of how the Bride became the deadliest person in the world. We see the story between her and her hard-hitting very mean master Pai-Mei.

    After a while there is the confrontation with Elle Driver...the Battle of the Blonde Gargantuants...as Uma Thurman referred to it in an interview. This one fight scene is almost as exciting as watching the Bride battling off tons of the Crazy 88s from Vol. 1.

    Then the battle we were all waiting for. For Uma Thurman to Kill Bill...well I won't spoil it for you. Basically vol. 1 was 95% style 5% substance while vol. 2 is 95% substance 5% style. Very emotional and touching movie with a few key gore scenes...definitely a must see...
    8slokes

    The Better Half

    It's a matter of some debate which volume of Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill" is better. Let's end the argument right now: David Carradine doesn't even appear in "Volume 1." Hasn't the Academy mailed him his Best Supporting Actor Oscar already?

    In the first volume of "Kill Bill," released only a few months before "Vol. 2" in the tail end of 2003, we met Uma Thurman, one peeded-off super-assassin taking out some folks from her past one at a time, with the occasional mega-posse thrown in for interest. "Vol. 1" had a lot of blood, violence, and wisecracks, and galloped across the screen like a rap video on steroids.

    "Vol. 2" is way different. It makes sense it's a separate movie; the tone is such a departure from "Vol. 1" in two ways. One is style. Director Tarantino has fun stylistically quoting Sergio Leone and chop-fu cheapos from the late 1960s and early 1970s. Cinematic sampling is something he's good at and enjoys, but in "Vol. 2" he doesn't go as overboard as he does in "Vol. 1." He pulls back and lets the plot breathe, rather than filling every spare second with a homage-cum-parody that maybe a dozen lucky fans will get. Maybe some here wish he'd pile it on a bit more, but they have to make do with the goofy Pei Mai sequence, which is a flashback and hence not jarring in its "Vol. 1"-style comic-book treatment. Throughout "Vol. 2" the emphasis is on storytelling and character-building, which is where it should be given we are now being asked to deepen our commitment of interest to these people. "Vol. 1" is okay for what it is, but its flash and action are no match for the depth and nuance of "Vol. 2."

    This gets to the second different tonal difference between the films, which is emotional. It all comes back to the characters. They don't quite become real people here, but they get close enough to get under your skin. Admittedly, the opening part of "Vol. 2" tests the viewer's patience a bit, there's some long bits that show the director hasn't really mastered self-discipline, like with Thurman's graveyard struggle, but the meandering usually has a purpose. Tarantino is building toward something here that has its payoff when Thurman's character finally has her face-to-face showdown with Carradine's Bill.

    From that moment forward to the end, this is the best Tarantino has ever been.

    Carradine and Thurman dominate the proceedings with two of the finest performances I've seen, certainly the best Tarantino has directed, playing off the mythology we've been taught in "Vol. 1" and developing resonances with the viewer both together and apart which will surprise those expecting a casual butt-kicking affair. We finally find out what Carradine means in the first line of "Vol. 1" where he tells a whimpering victim he is being masochistic, not sadistic, and its a powerful revelation, that this sinister baddie may have a heart buried under that cold exterior. Carradine is perfect in his phrasing, his pauses, the tired glint in his eye, or the way he says "Kiddo." You can't ask for a better veteran performance. For her part, Thurman presents a brilliantly conflicted character who can not stop either hating or loving Bill, and brings us not into a world of cartoon anguish, but real human pain.

    "Kill Bill Vol. 2" is slow-moving, and needs "Vol. 1" in a way few sequels do, since it assumes you know nearly all the characters coming in. That's a weakness. So are some undeniably pointless bits, including the entire sequence with Bill's father figure, Esteban Vihaio, and some business at a bar involving Michael Madsen, who plays a former assassin now gone to seed.

    Madsen's good, though, and so's Daryl Hannah as another rather mouthy assassin, Gordon Liu as Pei Mei, and especially Perla Haney-Jardine as a girl named B.B. The nice thing with Tarantino is for every scene that strikes a bum note, there's four or five that hit the right mark, and some manage to do much more. My favorite scene involves a Mexican standoff in an L.A. hotel room between Thurman's character and an anonymous hitwoman, at once grippingly suspenseful, hilarious, and life-affirming. Still, it's the final moments of this film that will stay with you, as Bill and his former pupil work out their "unfinished business" and we are left to ponder the results of their decisions and actions.

    "Kill Bill Vol. 2" may not reach the heights of cinema to which it aspires, the level of "The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly" quoted in its score, but it's a fine film that will make most viewers glad they stuck around for the second installment. I am.
    7lucaslw-93145

    Not as good as the first Volume

    The second half to Tarantino's Kill Bill movie, Volume 2 gives us an adequate ending to The Bride's quest for vengeance. I'm not blown away by Vol. 2 and it feels like a weaker version of the first Volume. Gone is the caliber of character and flair that blessed the first volume. Gone is the sense of mystery carefully cultivated in the first volume, replaced by backstory that's wholly acceptable but ultimately uninspired. The dialogue is fine as well, it's Tarantino dialogue, but still not as good as the first volume. Soundtrack is fine, but definitely not as iconic as the soundtrack of Vol. 1.

    Volume 2 doesn't take itself seriously, a continuation of the same signature demeanor of the first Volume, but while Vol. 1 pulled it off in an irreverent manner, Vol. 2 comes across as goofy and slightly overdone, and not goofy in a positive way.

    It's an OK movie, my critique sounds overly negative but 7/10 really isn't a terrible film. I just don't think this lives up to the preceding volume. I'm sure there's some deep film-lover layers of meaning that flew over my head, I saw another review waxing poetic about how this was the best thing Tarantino's ever done and talked about all the homages to other film inspiration layered into the film that I very much did not pick up on. So if that's your demographic, this might be the movie for you.

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Quentin Tarantino originally intended to only have Pai Mei's lips speaking Cantonese, while his voice would be in English, imitating a bad dub job. Tarantino was going to provide the voice himself. In the end, Tarantino abandoned this idea, and Pai Mei (Chia-Hui Liu) speaks in his own voice.
    • Pifias
      When Beatrix is on the patio, after being "shot" by her daughter, she is sitting on the ground hugging her, the sword on her back disappears and reappears numerous times between shots.
    • Citas

      Bill: Pai Mei taught you the five point palm-exploding heart technique?

      The Bride: Of course he did.

      Bill: Why didn't you tell me?

      The Bride: I don't know... because I'm a bad person.

      Bill: No. You're not a bad person. You're a terrific person. You're my favorite person, but every once in a while, you can be a real cunt.

    • Créditos adicionales
      After the credits there is an outtake with Uma Thurman.
    • Versiones alternativas
      Hong Kong version differs very slightly from the US version. The only difference is that some alternate shots were used in the scene where Beatrix drives to Esteban and the scene where she finally goes to him in the village.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair (2006)
    • Banda sonora
      About Her
      Written by Malcolm McLaren (as M. McLaren), W.C. Handy, Rod Argent

      Performed by Malcolm McLaren

      Courtesy of Malcolm McLaren

      Contains samples of "She's Not There"

      Written by Rod Argent

      Published by Marquis Music Co. Ltd.

      Performed by The Zombies

      Licensed courtesy of Marquis Enterprises Limited

      and of "St. Louis Blues"

      Written by W.C. Handy (as William C. Handy)

      Published by Handy Brothers Music Co., Inc., New York

      Administered by EMI Music Publishing Ltd.

      On behalf of Francis Day & Hunter

      Performed by Bessie Smith

      Original recording from the film "St. Louis Blues" in 1929

      Used with permission. All rights reserved.

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    Preguntas frecuentes31

    • How long is Kill Bill: Vol. 2?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is the black mamba a real snake?
    • What is 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' about?
    • Is 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' based on a book?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 23 de julio de 2004 (España)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official Facebook
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Cantonés
      • Mandarín
      • Español
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Kill Bill: Volum 2
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Pekín, China
    • Empresas productoras
      • Miramax
      • A Band Apart
      • Super Cool ManChu
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • 30.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 66.208.183 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 25.600.000 US$
      • 18 abr 2004
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 152.161.179 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 2h 17min(137 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.39 : 1

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