There will be spoilers.
After my recent tirade, it should come as no surprise that I’m gradually canceling streaming services. And nothing motivates me to watch something more than a deadline. Monday I noticed that Boy Kills World arrived on Hulu, and that after Friday I won’t have Hulu anymore. So I buckled in and watched it. At first I wasn’t entirely convinced it would be worth my time. Still, word of mouth was so good I had to give it a chance.
I’m glad I did.
Boy (Bill Skarsgård) lives in a locked down city ruled over by the Van Der Koy family. Every year there’s a Hunger Games meets Logan’s Run culling of citizens to keep crime down or something. Hilda (Famke Janssen) is the chief ruler (and bears an uncanny resemblance to Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer), while Melanie (Michelle Dockery) runs media, and Glen (Sharlto Copley) does PR, badly, while looking like California governor Gavin Newsom (am I reading too much into this?). Boy's memories of his childhood are hazy, but he remembers his mom and sister having been killed in the culling. Adding to his trauma, he's made deaf and mute, and raised by the Shaman (Yayan Ruhian) to take revenge.
And since Boy doesn’t remember what he sounds like, he adopts a video game voice for his internal monolog.
He’s also haunted by the ghost of his little sister, Mina (Quinn Copeland).
After years of training and hallucinogenic drug trips, Boy is chiseled into the perfect killing machine. Once he starts killing the Van Der Koy goons, he finds himself in over his head and ends up joining forces with a team. And once his first team member accidentally kills Glenn, there’s no slowing down or pausing his mission of revenge. So far, so predictable: prolog, ordinary world, tests/allies/enemies, crossing the threshold.
Lots and lots of carnage with hyperkinetic violence.
But I want to circle back to the team. The Shaman was cruel to Boy and, while a mentor, he was not a friend. He had his own agenda and actually hates Boy. So when Boy meets Basho (Andrew Koji), who offers to aid him, Boy is thrilled. Basho introduces him to others, and soon Boy has a “found family.” This is a common trope in modern films, something that’s become so common that we don’t see it anymore. Blood family relationships are increasing rare in comedy and action movies, as the found family takes predominance (including my beloved Fast and Furious franchise).
Though the family unit is fractured, as humans we long for more than friends.
So imagine my surprise, not when Boy’s team gets wiped out (his type of hero usually ends up alone), but when he learns that the Van Der Koy’s lead assassin is his definitely not-dead sister (Jessica Rothe) and that Hilda is their mother. Yeah, the movie probably owes a debt to Star Wars as much as Kill Bill, but they didn’t telegraph it. Boy and his sister reunite to, well, kill their world and emerge victorious where he and his found family failed.
Sometimes broken families can reunite. Sometimes they can’t. Sometimes it’s a bit of both.
But blood family is every bit as important as found family and isn’t celebrated nearly as much.
Whether or not Boy Kills World is for you depends on your stomach for bloody violence and tolerance for gimmicky narration. But while the trailers make it look like a Deadpool clown show, it never gives into MCU insincerity. Heartfelt moments are allowed to play, and the pace isn’t as frenetic as you might expect.
I can’t say I’m in a hurry to watch it again, or even add it to my library, but I’m glad I saw it and for things it made me think.