
V for Vendetta
By Cynthia Fuchs,
Common Sense Media Reviewer
Common Sense Media Reviewers
Complex but heavy-handed action film. Adults only.

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V for Vendetta
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Based on 26 parent reviews
Ignore the 2 stars, this movie is excellent.
What are some of these people talking aboout?
What's the Story?
More generic action movie than philosophical investigation, V FOR VENDETTA focuses on a young woman's political education. The underlying, irresolvable question has to do with terrorism: why and how are people pushed to commit it, and what might it achieve, aside from fear and oppression? Can calculated violence, ever, as its proponents argue, lead to "freedom"? At the center of is masked terrorist V (Hugo Weaving), who battles against a very corrupt British regime. Out after curfew, Evey (Natalie Portman) is about to be raped by some bad cops when V appears, kills them, and initiates his instruction of the vulnerable Evey in his anarchistic plot. V's rage is fueled by the usual superhero's past trauma. While the movie allows that torture only reproduces terrorism and violence, it also presents V's scheme as revolutionary and effectively symbolic. While V is hunted by a decent cop Finch (Stephen Rea), he keeps Evey at his secret lair, where he makes her tea and eggs for breakfast. Her eventual escape only leads her to a more awful place, imprisoned and tortured. At last, she admits, she is no longer afraid to die. And in this, she finds what V calls "freedom."
Is It Any Good?
Heavy-handed pronouncements exemplify V for Vendetta's distrust of viewers to interpret what they see, making the film's political and social commentary seem more cartoonish than insightful. Yes, imperialism is really bad, and yes, Nazi-ish iconography is a sure sign of a regime's need for change. What's less clear, and could use some reflection, is how V's violent acts will or will not produce more victims and vigilantes. "Freedom and justice are more than words," he says, "They are perspectives." And as such, they need rethinking at every step.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about the film's presentation of terrorism as reasonable response to state oppression. Is violence ever an appropriate response? How do the evil chancellor's raging and V's tragic background (abused and institutionalized as a child) make V's cause seem sympathetic, even if it's illegal and aggressive? How does Evey's own childhood loss of her parents make her ready to be V's protégé? For fans of the book, families can discuss the differences between the film and its inspiration.
Movie Details
- In theaters: March 17, 2006
- On DVD or streaming: August 1, 2006
- Cast: Hugo Weaving , John Hurt , Natalie Portman
- Director: James McTeigue
- Inclusion Information: Female actors
- Studio: Warner Bros.
- Genre: Action/Adventure
- Run time: 131 minutes
- MPAA rating: R
- MPAA explanation: strong violence and some language
- Last updated: November 20, 2023
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