KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE
Director : Matthew Vaughn
Cast : Colin Firth, Samuel L. Jackson, Taron Egerton, Sophie Cookson, Sofia Boutella, Jack Davenport, Mark Strong, Michael Caine
Genre : Action/Thriller
Run Time : 129 mins
Opens : 12 February 2015
Rating : M18 (Coarse Language and Violence)
The
gentleman spy – judging from Hollywood’s preoccupation with rough-and-tumble
gritty action thrillers, it might seem like an archetype that has gone out of
style. Kingsman: The Secret Service
endeavours to bring it back. Colin Firth plays Harry Hart, codename “Galahad”,
a member of the elite independent clandestine organisation Kingsman. When it
comes time to recruit a new Kingsman, Harry sets his sights on Gary “Eggsy”
Unwin (Egerton), a ne’er do well from the wrong side of the tracks. Eggsy is
put through his paces, subjected to the rigorous Kingsman training and
selection process, picked on by most of the other recruits but finding a friend
in the form of Roxy (Cookson). In the meantime, a global threat surfaces in the
form of megalomaniacal tech billionaire Richmond Valentine (Jackson), hell-bent
on unleashing a catastrophe only Kingsman can foil.
Kingsman:
The Secret Service is adapted from the comic book by Mark Millar and Dave
Gibbons. Director Matthew Vaughn previously collaborated with Millar on Kick-Ass, to smashing results. Just like
the bespoke tailored suits showcased in the film, Vaughn is a perfect fit for
the source material. Between this and X-Men
First Class, he more than proves he’s worthy of directing an actual Bond
movie. While Vaughn and co-writer Jane Goldman have changed a fair bit from the
comics, there are still nods fans of the book will enjoy, such as Mark Hamill
playing a supporting role – Hamill was one of the kidnapped celebrities
featured in the comic. Kingsman: The
Secret Service is filled with playful homages to classic spy-fi staples,
such as The Avengers, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Get Smart (listen out for the line about
the shoe phone) and of course the early Bond films. There are even shout-outs
to Dr. Strangelove and The Shining. In the midst of making all
those references, Vaughn manages to imbue the movie with an identity all its
own, tossing several surprises into what seems like a very familiar spy yarn.
Kingsman:
The Secret Service is a throwback to the above-mentioned shows and movies
and in a Tarantino-esque way, spy movies pop up as a subject of discussion in
the film itself. Of course, Vaughn was never going to play it straight and that
wicked, subversive streak he displayed in Kick-Ass
is in full force here. Vaughn takes palpable delight in juxtaposing the
cultured high-society world of countryside mansions, 19th Century
brandy and Saville Row tailors with lots of swearing and graphic brutality.
Brace yourself for impalements, severed limbs, exploding heads and even someone
getting bifurcated by way of bladed prosthetic leg. Most likely on the strength
of Kick-Ass, Vaughn has managed to
convince the studio bigwigs to let him go the full, gleefully R-rated hog
instead of having to pull his punches and deliver a softer, friendlier product.
The single sentence “Colin Firth
kicking ass” is really all the promotion and marketing this movie needs.
Expertly playing on his public persona as an evergreen Mr. Darcy, it is an
absolute thrill to see the Oscar-winning thesp take out a bar full of street
toughs with calculated efficiency. The physical training that the actor underwent
pays off, and it really doesn’t feel as if Firth sat out the action sequences
for a stunt double to take his place. One jaw-dropping, blood-soaked scene has
been compared to the martial arts in The
Raid, the camera-work kinetic and jittery yet stopping short of incoherent
and nausea-inducing. Firth is able to bring a lot more to the role past that
casting gimmick, admirably lending genuine pathos when it is required.
This reviewer was worried about how
Taron Egerton would come off in this film, as the role of the “unrefined
mentee” who is taken in and shown the ropes is usually played one of two ways:
insufferably annoying or just really bland. Egerton manages to be neither and
does make for a convincing street kid, possessing just enough bad boy swagger
without it being ridiculous. As Roxy, Sophie Cookson is appealingly spirited
and cool; it’s to Vaughn and Goldman’s credit that they don’t force a
predictable romance between Eggsy and Roxy into the movie, their relationship
actually more satisfying for it.
Samuel L. Jackson has the time of
his life here – for an actor who’s in everything from direct-to-DVD dreck to
the biggest blockbusters, he isn’t given to sleepwalking through roles. His
lisping, charismatic supervillain is a hoot – it’s to Jackson’s credit that
he’s able to balance the menacing and funny sides of Valentine. It also helps
that Valentine’s henchwoman Gazelle (Boutella), giving new meaning to the term
“blade runner”, is distinctive, graceful and terrifying. Mark Strong lends a gruff
authority and trustworthiness to the role of Merlin, Kingsman quartermaster and
the supervisor of the recruits’ training. It’s also fun to see Michael Caine in
this – this reviewer assumed that he would merely show up as the Kingsman head
and not have much to do beyond that, but there are a few more layers to
“Arthur”.
If there’s one major element that
lets Kingsman: The Secret Service
down, it would be the film’s reliance on sometimes-unconvincing
computer-generated imagery. Sure, it’s heightened and has no aspirations to
realism, but cheap-looking CGI can still pull an audience out of it. This is
most noticeable during a scene set at the edge of space involving a satellite
that has to be shot down. Still, the intricately-choreographed stunt work,
including Firth’s martial arts mayhem and one of the most exciting skydiving
scenes in recent memory, do make up for it. In Kingsman, genre aficionados will find a spy flick that’s as fresh
as it is nostalgic and will come away thoroughly entertained.
Summary: An edgy, entertaining, genre-savvy spy movie filled
with winks, nods, carnage and Colin Firth kicking ass.
RATING: 4 out of 5
Stars
Jedd Jong
Jedd Jong
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