Parents' Guide to

Boy Kills World

Movie R 2024 115 minutes
Boy Kills World Movie Poster: Nine characters from the movie hold weapons and stare straight ahead

Common Sense Media Review

Sandie Angulo Chen By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 17+

Extremely bloody adventure is more style than substance.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 17+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 18+

Based on 1 parent review

age 18+

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (1 ):
Kids say (4 ):

More style than substance, this graphically bloody thriller shows promise but underdelivers. Skarsgård tries to carry Boy Kills World with his physical acting, using his entire body to convey a wide spectrum of human emotions. And the world-building starts off intriguing but isn't developed enough to be more than subpar. The movie's most compelling aspect is the relationship between Boy and the ghost of his little sister (Quinn Copeland), who acts as Boy's best friend, cheerleader, and conscience.

The movie marks director Mortiz Mohr's feature-length debut, and it aims to be on the same level as Kill Bill or John Wick, but it tries too hard to be too many things. Despite the familiar cast and presence of veteran martial artists Ruhian and Andrew Koji, the jokes don't quite land, and the big plot twist is foreshadowed just enough to make it dissatisfying. Co-stars Brett Gelman and Michelle Dockery are momentarily amusing as two Van Der Koy siblings, Sharlto Copley gets a dark laugh as a brother-in-law who's forced to be the family's PR spokesman, and Jessica Rothe is memorable as the one family assassin who can match Boy's skills. But for all of its frenetic fight scenes, Boy Kills World drags in places, making it seem longer than its 115-minute runtime. An interesting idea that isn't cleverly enough developed, this is ultimately a miss for all but die-hard fans of the bloody revenge genre.

Movie Details

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