
Baz is one of Britain's new bicycle police, a figure of fun. But soon he will turn from cycle cop to psycho-path. As riots break out in London, a head injury skews Baz into a vigilante, offering criminals the choice of arrest or death. Baz sees his campaign as lawful killing. Lowlifes who are too stunned, confused, or drunk to argue when he politely asks, "May I kill you?" are merrily dispatched. All filmed on the helmet-cam and posted on social networks! Using the alte... (Full plot summary below)
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Baz is one of Britain's new bicycle police, a figure of fun. But soon he will turn from cycle cop to psycho-path. As riots break out in London, a head injury skews Baz into a vigilante, offering criminals the choice of arrest or death. Baz sees his campaign as lawful killing. Lowlifes who are too stunned, confused, or drunk to argue when he politely asks, "May I kill you?" are merrily dispatched. All filmed on the helmet-cam and posted on social networks! Using the alter ego @N4cethelaw, Baz acquires thousands more fans with each killing, dispensing justice to scumbags, cleaning up society. In a sudden reversal, Baz is captured by an enraged relative of one of his presumed "kills", and faces slaughter or - even worse - exposure.
Leave your thoughts about May I Kill U?.
| Los Angeles TimesRobert AbeleThe only real response to a thuddingly unfunny vigilante satire like "May I Kill U" is, "Well, I hope that filmmaker got something out of his system." |
| Daily Express (UK)Allan HunterA tacky, low-budget film that is as blunt and obvious as the instruments Baz uses on his victims. |
| Little White LiesMartyn ConterioA spoof of right-wing reactionary politics that feels better suited to television than cinema. |
| Metro (UK)Larushka Ivan-ZadehCompetently directed, if incompetently written, it's hard to discern its point - but if that included making you laugh, it indisputably failed. |
| The Sun (UK)Grant RollingsA dumb farce which is neither funny or scary. |
| GuardianPeter BradshawAll the material about social media looks forced and behind the curve, and nothing about the movie is really convincing or entertaining on any level, making it valueless as drama or satire. |
| Empire MagazineAndrew OsmondSetting out to be a killer-cop satire for the social media age, the result makes Paul Blart look like Taxi Driver. Unfollow immediately. |
| Total FilmMatt GlasbyA satire so blunt it makes an early - but compelling - case for most misguided film of 2013. |
| Daily Telegraph (UK)Robbie CollinThere may well be a worse film released this year than this unwatchable British black comedy, although it sets a terrifyingly low benchmark. |
| User ReviewTom MVery often with these kind of films, you get a great concept with a not so great execution, but this is an exception. The use of what I imagined to be footage from the 2011 London riots was cleverly interwoven into the film to portray a London of petty crooks and bored coppers. The interesting twist by use of the flipped roles of 'Baz' the bicycle cop and a tattooed and lazily-bearded offender, in what seems to be an interview room, provides a dramatic and humorous opening as the events that led up to the moment unwind before us. With his poisonous, ciggy-puffing mother judging his every move and decision, we have the fascinating contrast of Baz' comic work life, in which I felt very comfortable viewing, and his home, which was cleverly filmed to highlight Baz' discomfort and feeling of sickness at his mother's presence and attitude, which resounds in the audience. With appropriate twists and turns throughout, this is one of those films that guarantees a laugh and an interesting pry into the lives of those who seem to be totally normal people. |