“Oh, you’ve got a big reboot, a big reboot of Kick-Ass’ in two years,” Vaughn said during a King’s Man press post that asked if the series would ever return. “Big reboot… I’m so sick that I cannot talk about it. But we have one ready to go. All the rights go back in two years and then we’ll reboot it.” The smallest Spider-Man problem in the United States is fixed in no way home. Vaughn will shift his approach to a kick-Ass that no one expects or sees coming. At that time, it was controversial – the only other major R-rated comic book movie of that era was Wanted, which dropped a lot of superhero and villain motifs to a more Matrix-like story. Kick-Ass became a brutal Spider-Man tidbit, though without the powers. The story featured a young teenager to be defeated by real world struggles, juggling two lives and fighting street-level thugs. You’re supposed to know something, right? “I think Kick-Ass’s becoming a new genre,” said Vaughn. “When we made this, everybody looked like a ‘hello, you can’t make superheroes with R-rated rating. No one wants to see a superhero with R-rated grades. You can’t do that. You can’t do that. He said in a manner that “I was crazy and so wild.” “Yeah! I went, great.” It’s not going to cause a lot of controversy. Everyone will talk about it, and as much people will like it will hate it. I don’t say that it doesn’t have the characters or characters in it and won’t be showing it. It is just said that it isn’t what anyone imagines. We’re going to need a very brave actor or actress who could play the new Kick-Ass – because it’ll scare those who didn’t do that. In fact, the comic’s author – Mark Millar – says that he hasn’t had any talks with Vaughn about a third film or reboot. Some talks are likely to happen when the rights revert or maybe Vaughn is getting ahead of himself – whatever the case is – he wants more.