A View To A ‘Kingsman’ (Movie Review)
Kingsman:
The Secret Service:
4 out of 5
Harry: Manners maketh man.
The
Spy Who Loved Me is one of my favorite James Bond movies. It is easily the best of the Roger Moore
entries, but also a fine example of how strong the more cinematically over-the-top
versions of the world famous British spy can be. Kingsman:
The Secret Service essentially functions as one of the more outlandish
James Bond entries, albeit made up of different characters and stemming from a
graphic novel world, with a style and tone fitting of the millennial age. Director Matthew Vaughn, along with his
screenwriting partner Jane Goldman, clearly had fun developing and filming the
sort of R-rated madness taking place in this self-aware action-comedy, but it
also has some of the dry British humor and sensibilities that make it more than
just a new take on the ‘spy spoof’ for regular movie goers and a series of
in-jokes for the filmmakers and movie geeks invested in the entertaining work
of filmmakers like Vaughn. It is more
than that, which comes in the form of a smart script that services most of its
principle characters properly and is also a lot of fun.
In this film, there are
only a handful of key performances, but each actor really brings there all to
what is required of them in ways that set them apart from past
performances. The utterly charming Colin
Firth is Harry Hart, a secret agent who can handle himself in a fight quite
easily. Usually quite villainous, Mark
Strong is now Merlin, a tech expert, with his mind set on keeping the world
safe. Michael Caine is actually more or
less a familiar Caine-type character, but he is the leader of this group of
secret agents, known as the Kingsmen.
And then you have the villain of the film, Samuel L. Jackson as Richmond
Valentine, a billionaire computer tycoon with a lisp, who has the kind of plans
that would have any Bond villain anxious to invite him into their secret
volcano lair. For protection, of course,
Valentine has a bodyguard/assistant, Gazelle (hip-hop/street dancer Sofia
Boutella), who has artificial legs fitted with deadly blades.
These are all important
people to keep track of, but ‘Kingsman’
is really more of an origin story for Gary “Eggsy” Unwin (Taron Egerton). It is easy enough to say Eggsy is the way to invite
the audience into the world of the Kingsmen, with the film itself essentially
having the structure of Men in Black,
with the coating of a James Bond film, all thrown into a Kick Ass blender, but what it may lack in truly original plotting,
it more than makes up for in its presentation and attitude. There is plenty of praise I can give to the kinetic
visual style and impressively-staged action that Matthew Vaughn has successful developed
over the years (he’s also responsible for Stardust
and X-Men: First Class), but a
lot of the weight of this film really sits upon Egerton’s shoulders, who is
more than capable of handling it.
It will be easy to
single out Colin Firth’s character, as he gets a lot of great dialogue and
scenes to act in, along with a standout action sequence at the end of the
second act, which is simply tremendous, but Egerton’s Eggsy is who we are ultimately
rooting for. From what I saw here, this
kid has talent, charisma, and a great career ahead of him, if he plays his
cards right. The way he works with the
other seasoned actors is impressive, his physicality and comic timing are
totally appropriate, and most importantly, he is not just the bland hero
character we are forced to follow along with.
There are a lot of wild characters in this film and Eggsy is fortunately
not just the one to take the audience to them; he gets in on the fun as well.
As for the rest of the
film, if the plot is what you need to be sold on, well it involves a bunch of
secret spies trying to stop a madman from destroying the world; there, I said
it. Moving on, we also have to contend
with Eggsy doing what he can to become one of the new Kingsmen agents, but that
is really more of a way to show us how cool (and very decidedly British) the
Kingsmen are. They wear great suits,
exhibit wonderful manners, and have badass spy equipment that is both effective
and suitably stylish. Umbrellas can help
Kingsmen stay dry and protect them from a hail of gunfire. Glasses can be used to see embedded codes and
holograms of people communicating with one another. It is fancy stuff and I can only imagine the
Kingsmen Edition Aston Martin is being saved for the sequel, Quantum of Kingsman or Kingsman Are Forever.
The film is based on a
graphic novel developed by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons. Vaughn previously adapted Millar and Gibbons’
Kick Ass and what I like about his adaptation,
which proved even more effective with this film, is how Vaughn tones down the
extremes that Millar tends to go too far with.
Where Millar is not one to understand the word “enough,” Vaughn is the
one who knows how to rein things in and respect what works better
cinematically. Kingsman: The Secret Service may still be a bit overlong, be a
little to on the nose with the references, and go a little too far with at
least one of its jokes (I am thinking of a sexual one towards the end), but it
also does fine in giving proper motivation for its characters, treating the
narrative with respect, and, best of all, being consistently fun and engaging.
Thoroughly violent and fairly
crude in spots, but also smart, funny, and inventive, Kingsman: The Secret Service takes the familiar concept of updating
the spy genre in a slick and humorous fashion, by approaching it with a level
of energy that is unique to director Matthew Vaughn. This may or may not be Vaughn’s best film
yet, but it does speak very well to what he is great at doing, which is
crafting witty scripts and exciting action that is punctuated by his
hyper-stylized sensibilities. There is a
very fun movie to see here, as it takes the classic spy adventure and goes
totally crazy with it.
Harry: Are we going to stand around here all day or
are we going to fight?
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