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Hit-Girl

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Hit-Girl
Millarworld character
First appearanceKick-Ass #3 (July 2008)
Last appearanceBig Game #5 (Nov. 2023)
Created byMark Millar
John Romita Jr.
Portrayed byChloë Grace Moretz
In-universe information
AliasMindy McCready
GenderFemale
OccupationVigilante
Kingsman agent
FamilyDamon McCready (father)
Kathleen McCready (née Williams) (mother)[1]
Significant othersDave Lizewski (film)
Gary "Eggsy" Unwin (comic)
AbilitiesMartial arts training

Hit-Girl (Mindy McCready)[a] is an antihero appearing in the Millarworld shared fictional universe, published by Marvel Comics (under the imprint Icon Comics) and later Image Comics. Created by artist John Romita Jr. and writer Mark Millar, the character is a young and effective vigilante, trained by her father Damon McCready (Big Daddy) from an early age to be a costumed superhero and assassin. In Kick-Ass: The Dave Lizewski Years, she is introduced as a supporting character, before featuring in her own self-titled comic book series, Hit-Girl, and Kick-Ass vs. Hit-Girl.[2] By her mid-20s, in Big Game, Mindy joins forces with Gary "Eggsy" Unwin against the forces of Wesley Gibson, becoming a Kingsman agent.

Hit-Girl is portrayed by Chloë Grace Moretz in the feature films Kick-Ass (2010) and Kick Ass 2 (2013).

Comics

Kick Ass: The Dave Lizewski Years

Following the death of her father Damon McCready (Big Daddy) in the first volume of The Dave Lizewski Years, Hit-Girl takes on Kick-Ass (Dave Lizewski) as her crime-fighting partner in the second and third volumes, training him and using him to hunt criminals together with her. She gets him to teach her how to be a normal kid, and get along with other girls somewhat older than herself. After she is arrested at the conclusion of the third volume, she breaks herself out of prison, and, joining back together with Kick-Ass, takes out the entirety of the Genovese crime family and their accomplices, before taking on a new Kick-Ass as her sidekick.

Artist John Romita Jr. signing a copy of the series at Midtown Comics in Manhattan.

Hit-Girl

Hit-Girl returns in Hit-Girl, where following the events of The Dave Lizewski Years, she hunts down criminals worldwide, appearing in Hit-Girl In Colombia, Canada, Rome, Hollywood, Hong Kong, and India.

Kick-Ass: The New Girl

Although Hit-Girl does not appear in the main plot of Kick-Ass: The New Girl, variant covers for the first and fifth issues feature her in combat with the Patience Lee incarnation of Kick-Ass.[3][4] In an epilogue in the series' final issue, Hit-Girl is made aware of Patience's activities as a supervillain using the Kick-Ass name, prompting her to return to the U.S. to kill her.[5] The five-issue sequel Kick-Ass vs. Hit-Girl, depicting this confrontation, went into publication on November 11, 2020.[6][7]

Crossover

An adult Hit-Girl first appears in the sixth issue of Crossover after being dragged into another reality by "The Event", partaking in an endless battle between residents of the Marvel, DC, and Image Universes (amongst characters from other properties by Image Comics, Dark Horse Comics, Skybound Entertainment and Boom! Studios, including The Wicked + The Divine and I Hate Fairyland), saving Otto and Ellie before jumping into another battle.[8]

Big Game

The adult Hit-Girl returns in Big Game, where-in she is rescued from assassination by British secret agent Gary "Eggsy" Unwin of the spy agency Kingsman, with whom she then infiltrates the headquarters of the Fraternity to assassinate Wesley Gibson. After Eggsy is killed, Mindy uses the Fraternity's stolen time machine to travel back in time, aiming to prevent the worldwide assassinations of all superheroes, ending up in prehistoric times.[9] On returning to the future with an alien army, Mindy travels back in time again to save all the superheroes, Eggsy, and her slightly younger self, who all join forces against Wesley, the Fraternity, and the alien army. When the older Mindy is shot in the face and killed by Wesley, the younger Mindy kills Wesley herself, before joining Kingsman as one of its agents.

Films

Hit-Girl appears in the 2010 film adaptation Kick-Ass, and its 2013 sequel Kick-Ass 2. Jane Goldman, one of the two co-writers of the first film's script, said, "We just really wanted Hit-Girl to be a character who, in a sense, simply happens to be an eleven-year-old girl, in the same way that Ripley in Alien could have been a guy but the part happened to be played by Sigourney Weaver." Goldman said that Mindy "is genuinely dangerous, she's genuinely mad. It's not her fault: she's been raised in this environment where she doesn't know anything different. She's unwittingly part of a folie à deux."[10] When asked if Hit-Girl could be considered a feminist heroine, Goldman said "Yeah… she's a feminist hero by token of the fact that she pays no attention to gender stereotypes. I think she also doesn't want special treatment because she's a girl."[10]

Casting

Chloë Grace Moretz as Hit-Girl in the 2010 film adaptation of Kick-Ass.

In 2008, shortly before the release of the film Wanted, 11-year-old actress Chloë Grace Moretz saw posters of Angelina Jolie for the film while riding with her mother in Los Angeles, prompting her to ask for a role that she described as "an Angelina Jolie-type character" and "like an action hero, woman empowerment, awesome, take-charge leading role". One month later, she was offered the role of Mindy Macready / Hit-Girl.[11]

Matthew Vaughn, commenting on the maturity of Moretz, said that because she has four older brothers, she was no stranger to much of the language in the script.[12][13] Moretz said that it was entertaining to illustrate the differences between Mindy and her superheroine identity "for me, 'cause it's almost like an alternate personality". Lewis Wallace of Wired said that Mindy "gets all the good lines, capping every Tarantino-scale bloodletting with a foul-mouthed joke". Christopher Mintz-Plasse, the actor who portrays Red Mist, said that "we (Kick-Ass and Red Mist) don't have any of the action in the movie. It's all Hit-Girl".[14] Vaughn said that Hit-Girl is a part of "the ultimate father-daughter relationship, where Barbie dolls are replaced with knives, and unicorns become hand grenades".[11]

To prepare for her role, Moretz took months of training in learning how to handle guns and to use butterfly knives and swords. Moretz stated that the shooting of the action scenes was arduous.[14] Goldman said that the aspect of the film adaptation that excited her the most was adapting Hit-Girl's storyline to the film.[15] Millar said he expected the character to receive mostly negative reception, "But the movie was so well made, I think, that people were quietly charmed by her for the most part. The only really negative thing we saw came from Roger Ebert and others from his generation who were upset, but there were those especially here in the United Kingdom [who] went crazy for her". Millar added he and Vaughn "were quite surprised about that. We were expecting the worst, that people were going to say she was amoral and we [in turn] were going to get killed for her. But it was much more of a case where people were positive about Hit-Girl even saying she was empowering female character".[16]

Controversy

In January 2010, an uncensored preview clip from the first film was criticized by family advocacy groups for its display of violence and use of the line "Okay, you cunts, let's see what you can do now", delivered by Chloë Grace Moretz, who was barely twelve years old at the time of filming. Australian Family Association spokesman John Morrissey claimed that "the language [was] offensive and the values inappropriate; without the saving grace of the bloodless victory of traditional superheroes".[17] Several critics accused the film of glorifying violence, particularly violence by young children.[18][19]

In response to the controversy, Moretz stated in an interview, "If I ever uttered one word that I said in Kick-Ass, I would be grounded for years! I'd be stuck in my room until I was 20! I would never in a million years say that. I'm an average, everyday girl."[13] Moretz has said that while filming, she could not bring herself to say the film's title out loud in interviews, instead calling it "the film" in public and "Kick-Butt" at home.[20] Christopher Mintz-Plasse expressed surprise that people were angry about the language but did not seem to be offended that Hit-Girl violently kills many people on-screen.[21]

Solo film discussions

In January 2015, Mark Millar revealed a Hit-Girl film with Gareth Evans directing had been planned and cancelled.[22] In June 2015, Matthew Vaughn discussed a possible return to the Kick-Ass franchise with a Hit-Girl & Big Daddy prequel film to revive interest, stating "If we make that, hopefully that will be the sorbet for the people that didn't like Kick-Ass 2 and then we can go off and make Kick-Ass 3. I think we've got to do this prequel to regain the love that we had with Kick-Ass."[23] In September 2017, Millar revealed he had discussed a potential Kingsman/Hit-Girl crossover film with Vaughn,[24] following "Eggsy and Hit-Girl on [a] big international adventure".[25][9]

Video games

Hit-Girl appear as a playable character in Kick-Ass: The Game and Kick-Ass 2: The Game, each respectively based on the two films.

Merchandise

In 2010, Mezco released Hit-Girl figures based on the film and followed-up with figures released in 2013 by Neca.

Skills and abilities

Mindy is an expert martial artist and proficient with a wide variety of melee weapons, capable of defeating large groups of armed thugs wielding a pair of swords or a double-bladed pole-arm. She is an excellent markswoman and proficient with practically all firearms from pistols to automatic rifles. Mindy is adept at stealth and evasion being able to infiltrate a maximum security prison with ease. She is an expert driver, with her vehicle of choice being a custom high-powered motorcycle. The nature of Big Daddy's training has made Hit-Girl a particularly brutal and remorseless character who does not flinch at torture or dispatching her opponents in the most gruesome and painful ways possible. She can be so intimidating that when she was briefly imprisoned she was soon the undisputed ruler of the adult penitentiary where she was held despite being a twelve-year-old girl. Mindy's one weakness, as pointed out by Mother Russia, is that her strength is limited by her youth which can cause an over-reliance on her weapons skills to compensate, a weakness eliminated by her 20s. Mother Russia seemed to be more than a match for Hit-Girl at hand-to-hand combat with the young vigilante winning their fight mostly through the intervention of chance.[26]

Personality

As a vigilante who regularly kills her opponents in violent fashion, Mindy displays the skill to carry out dangerous acts with high-level precision, and the emotional detachment and desensitized temperament necessary to do so. For example, when, in the comic book version, Kick-Ass tells her that her father was just murdered, she responds by saying, "Finish the job, mourn later." She exhibits other habits and demeanors more typically seen in adults who are hardened killers. She curses regularly and makes crude jokes, often adopting a sarcastic demeanor towards her crime-fighting partner/apprentice Kick-Ass, who describes her as resembling a mix between John Rambo and Polly Pocket. Despite the violent nature of her crime-fighting, and her ability to carry out such activities without apparent difficulty or remorse, Mindy has an interest in things typical of young people, such as Hello Kitty, comic books, Clint Eastwood and John Woo movies.[27] However, when Johnny G is killed at the end of The Dave Lizewski Years Book One, she turns to Kick-Ass and asks him for a hug, covered in tears and blood, as she mourns her father.[28]

Notes

  1. ^ Spelled Macready in the films.

References

  1. ^ Millar, Mark (w), Romita, John Jr. (a). Kick-Ass: The Dave Lizewski Years – Book Two #4. Marvel Comics (New York).
  2. ^ "The New Kick-Ass Comic Is Being Joined by an Ongoing Hit-Girl Series". io9. 2017. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  3. ^ Da Silva, Dave [@Dave_DSG] (January 22, 2018). "¡Awesome group of variant covers of…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  4. ^ Kick-Ass: The New Girl #5 variant cover (June 13, 2018). Image Comics.
  5. ^ Kick-Ass: The New Girl #18 (October 30, 2019). Image Comics.
  6. ^ Wood, Robert (October 29, 2020). "Kick-Ass vs. Hit-Girl Promises A Comics Bloodbath This November". Screen Rant. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  7. ^ DeArmitt, Grant (November 6, 2020). "Kick-Ass vs. Hit-Girl delivers "suspense and brutality" from Marcelo Frusin and Steve Niles". Games Radar. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  8. ^ Stone, Sam (May 2, 2021). "Crossover: Every Indie Comics Hero in the MASSIVE Battle Royale". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
  9. ^ a b Trent, John F. (May 17, 2023). "Mark Millar Announces First Ever Millarworld Crossover Event 'Big Game' That Will Also Serve As A Sequel To 'Wanted'". Bounding Into Comics. Retrieved May 17, 2023.
  10. ^ a b Day, Elizabeth (21 March 2010). "Jane Goldman: Meet the screenwriter of the controversial new film Kick-Ass". The Guardian. UK. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  11. ^ a b Itzkoff, Dave (April 8, 2010). "Just a Sweet Young Actress? $&@%# Right!". The New York Times. Retrieved February 3, 2011.
  12. ^ Jonathan Ross, Matthew Vaughn. Jonathan Ross interviews Matthew Vaughn. Archived from the original on December 20, 2021.(Video)
  13. ^ a b Carroll, Larry (20 January 2010). "'Kick-Ass' Star Chloe Moretz Is One Of 10 To Watch In 2010". MTV. Archived from the original on 7 May 2011. Moretz: I would love to. I can't say anything about [the ending], but I would love to be Hit-Girl twice, three times, four times in my life.
  14. ^ a b Wallace, Lewis (April 16, 2010). "Hit Girl's Revenge: The Kick-Ass Kids Are All Right". Wired. Retrieved January 25, 2011.
  15. ^ Busch, Jenna (April 6, 2010). "How Kick-Ass' killer Hit Girl is like Alien's Ripley". Blastr. Syfy. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  16. ^ Fetters, Sara Michelle (2 August 2009). "Mark Millar Kicks Ass and Writes Comics". Moviefreak.com. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 21 January 2011.
  17. ^ "Family outrage at film Kick Ass (sic) violence and swearing". The Daily Telegraph. Australia. January 13, 2010.
  18. ^ Ebert, Roger (April 14, 2010). "Kick-Ass". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on October 11, 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2010.
  19. ^ "The Your Movie Sucks™ Files". Roger Ebert's Journal. Archived from the original on 24 June 2011.
  20. ^ Synnot, Siobhan (March 24, 2010). "What are little girls made of? Sugar and spice, punches and the odd four-letter word, when they're the surprise star of Kick-Ass". The Scotsman. Edinburgh.
  21. ^ White, Lucy (April 14, 2010). "Christopher Mintz-Passe: 60 Second interview". Metro Herald. p. 17. Archived from the original on August 15, 2011. People are so angry at Chloe [Grace Moretz] for saying bad language but she murders a ton of people and no one seems to be offended by that.
  22. ^ Tilly, Chris (January 27, 2015). "Mark Millar On The Hit-Girl Movie That Never Was". IGN.
  23. ^ Paclibar, Jenah (June 24, 2015). "Kick-ass 3 news: Director Matthew Vaughn teases Kick-ass 3 and Hit Girl prequel; series creator Mark Millar reveals talks are informal". Vine Report. Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  24. ^ Millar, Mark [@mrmarkmillar] (September 17, 2017). "Just saying to Matthew [what] a cool post-cred[its-scene it] would have been [in] HIT-GIRL ringing Eggsy's door-bell, [the] audience knowing imminent shit [is about] to go down" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  25. ^ Millar, Mark [@mrmarkmillar] (March 8, 2015). "@moiseschiu Eggsy and Hit-Girl on that poster in a big international adventure? It's a cool idea" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  26. ^ Perry, Spencer (June 22, 2012). "Read the First Six Pages of Hit-Girl #1". SuperHeroHype.com. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  27. ^ Mark Millar (w), John Romita, Jr. (p), Tom Palmer (i), Dean White (col), Chris Eliopoulos (let). Kick-Ass: The Dave Lizewski Years, vol. 1, p. chapter Seven/3 (2010). New York: Marvel Comics, ISBN 9780785134350.
  28. ^ Kick-Ass: The Dave Lizewski Years #8 (March 1, 2010). Icon Comics.

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