justind-13611
feb 2025 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
Nuestras actualizaciones aún están en desarrollo. Si bien la versión anterior de el perfil ya no está disponible, estamos trabajando activamente en mejoras, ¡y algunas de las funciones que faltan regresarán pronto! Mantente al tanto para su regreso. Mientras tanto, el análisis de calificaciones sigue disponible en nuestras aplicaciones para iOS y Android, en la página de perfil. Para ver la distribución de tus calificaciones por año y género, consulta nuestra nueva Guía de ayuda.
Distintivos2
Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
Calificaciones5
Clasificación de justind-13611
Reseñas2
Clasificación de justind-13611
In Nobody 2, we find ourselves once again in the warm, flannel-clad embrace of Hutch Mansell, a man who has perfected the art of passive aggression with his knuckles. The sequel, a cinematic equivalent of a high-stakes, family-friendly holiday brawl, sees our hero trying to take a well-deserved break. Because, as everyone knows, the only thing more relaxing than a quiet week at home is a trip to a disfy run down theme park with your incredibly dangerous father and a son who has clearly inherited the "I can't believe I'm related to these people" gene.
The film's plot is deceptively simple: Hutch and his family go to a place called Plummerville, which, for some reason, is not a town where everyone is a plumber. Instead, it's a hotbed of corruption, featuring a villain so delightfully over-the-top that you can almost smell the mustache-twirling. Sharon Stone joins the cast, proving that even as a crime boss, she's still the most intimidating person in the room. You just know she's the kind of villain who uses a rusty spoon as a weapon, and not in a cool, martial arts way, but in a "I'm going to make this last all day" kind of way.
The action sequences are, of course, where the film truly shines. It's less a fight scene and more a ballet of blunt-force trauma. The bus fight from the first film? That's a gentle tickle compared to what happens when Hutch gets his hands on a poorly maintained churro cart. The comedy comes not from punchlines, but from the sheer, bloody absurdity of the violence. It's the kind of movie where a character gets hit in the head with a rubber duck and you genuinely wonder if they'll survive.
So, is Nobody 2 worth the ticket price? Absolutely. It's a sequel that delivers more of what we loved from the first, while still managing to feel fresh. It's a reminder that sometimes the best way to solve your problems is with a well-aimed punch, and that the only thing worse than a family holiday is a family holiday where the theme park operator is a homicidal maniac.
Rating: Four out of five perfectly placed uppercuts.
The film's plot is deceptively simple: Hutch and his family go to a place called Plummerville, which, for some reason, is not a town where everyone is a plumber. Instead, it's a hotbed of corruption, featuring a villain so delightfully over-the-top that you can almost smell the mustache-twirling. Sharon Stone joins the cast, proving that even as a crime boss, she's still the most intimidating person in the room. You just know she's the kind of villain who uses a rusty spoon as a weapon, and not in a cool, martial arts way, but in a "I'm going to make this last all day" kind of way.
The action sequences are, of course, where the film truly shines. It's less a fight scene and more a ballet of blunt-force trauma. The bus fight from the first film? That's a gentle tickle compared to what happens when Hutch gets his hands on a poorly maintained churro cart. The comedy comes not from punchlines, but from the sheer, bloody absurdity of the violence. It's the kind of movie where a character gets hit in the head with a rubber duck and you genuinely wonder if they'll survive.
So, is Nobody 2 worth the ticket price? Absolutely. It's a sequel that delivers more of what we loved from the first, while still managing to feel fresh. It's a reminder that sometimes the best way to solve your problems is with a well-aimed punch, and that the only thing worse than a family holiday is a family holiday where the theme park operator is a homicidal maniac.
Rating: Four out of five perfectly placed uppercuts.
Yes I did go into this blind! I thought it would be in a similar vein to other Knoxville movies but it was a very sombre drama. But there was no spark, where was the soundtrack? Music would have made this movie much better and a few good jokes! Why wasn't there any jokes? Theo and Bobby Lee and no jokes? Doesn't make sense I know it's a depressing story but come on it needed some spark! Was a hard watch for me but I didn't turn it off at least!