Imagine putting the James Bond movies into a cinematic blender
with the Austin Powers comedies, and you’ll see what British director Matthew
Vaughn does with his outlandish movie “Kingsman: The Secret Service.” For
the record, Vaughn made his first film as a director in 2004 with the murderous
mobster melodrama “Layer Cake” (2004) starring Daniel Craig. Three years
later he followed up “Layer Cake” with “Stardust.” This imaginative Neil
Gaiman fantasy romance bore little resemblance to the gritty “Layer
Cake.” Vaughn didn’t come into his own until he adapted Mark Millar’s
subversive graphic novel “Hit Girl” as the Nicolas Cage actioneer “Kick
Ass.” This controversial revenge thriller about a dad and daughter who
dressed like comic book super-heroes to destroy a dastardly gangster spawned a
sequel. Vaughn’s biggest success came with the incomparable Marvel Comics
“X-Men” prequel “X-Men: First Class” about the costume-clad mutants in their
youth during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. Vaughn has recycled many of
the themes and characters from those movies for his adaptation of Mark Millar’s
graphic novel “Kingsman: The Secret Service”(***1/2 OUT OF ****) that features Colin Firth, Michael
Caine, and Mark Strong. This uneven but entertaining homage to the James
Bond movies provides an overdue departure from the usual formulaic,
testosterone laden fare that sacrifices wit and style for realism and
gore. Mind you, Vaughn grinds his action gears during the early scenes as
he sets up his improbable plot. Happily, he has everything running
smoothly for an explosive finale. The big problem that Vaughn had to
contend with in launching a new franchise was pairing relatively unknown actor
Taron Egerton with veteran actor Colin Firth who rarely plays armed and deadly
heroes. Meanwhile, sympathetic heroes and treacherous villains tangle
mercilessly in this larger-than-life, hyperbolic espionage escapade that could
easily qualify as “50 Shades of Blood” for its sensational number of
mind-blowing action scenes. Hundreds of thousands of people perish when
an evil megalomaniac plans to solve overpopulation by implanting SIM cards into
their heads, controlling their thoughts, and converting their cell phones into
improvised explosive devices. “Kingsman: The Secret Service” qualifies as
the kind of silly but stout, R-rated saga that might repel squeamish moviegoers.
Matthew Vaughn and his wife Jane Golden, who has collaborated on
every film her husband has helmed except “Layer Cake,” have adapted Mark
Millar’s graphic novel with the same audacious abandon that they infused in
“Kick Ass.” Indeed, they have made some extreme but inspired changes to
Millar’s narrative. For example,
without giving anything away, the villain in the graphic novel was Caucasian;
the villain’s second-in-command was male, and Mark Hamill played himself rather
than a scientist. “Kingsman” concerns an independent, international espionage
agency hidden behind the façade of an elite tailor's shop on London's Savile
Row that operates at the highest level of discretion like “The Man from
U.N.C.L.E” television series. This private outfit makes Navy SEALs look
like second-rate shrimp. Indeed, if such an ultra-secret organization
existed, world peace would be guaranteed. Latter day British knights of
the realm with appropriate code-names like Lancelot and Galahad, these dudes
cut dashing figures in their globe-trotting missions to preserve peace and
solidarity. The cream of their crop, Harry Hart (Colin Firth), ranks as
their top agent. He is at his best when he has little more than an
umbrella to vanquish the villains. British actor Colin Firth, who plays
the impeccably clad protagonist, has been acting since 1984, but he is known
largely as a lightweight leading man in romantic comedies like “Mamma Mia!,”
“Shakespeare in Love,” and “Bridget Jones’ Diary.” In 2007, he ventured
out of his comfort zone and played an armor-clad knight in the above-average
medieval swashbuckler “The Last Legion.” During one of Vaughn’s many
impressively staged action set-pieces, Firth devastates a hatemongering
Westboro-style church congregation in a no-holds-barred, free-for-all
fracas.
As “Kingsman” unfolds, Harry Hart’s closest comrade, Lancelot
(Jack Davenport), dies during a mission but saves Harry’s life.
Predictably, Harry consoles Lancelot’s grieving widow and son.
Understandably distraught by her husband’s mysterious demise, Michelle Unwin
(Samantha Womack of “Breeders”) wants nothing to do with Kingsman.
Nevertheless, Harry persuades her only son, Eggsy, to accept Lancelot’s medal
inscribed with a phone number and a code word should he ever require
help. Seventeen years later, as an underprivileged teen living in the
projects, Eggsy finds himself in deep trouble. Our wild, impulsive hero
steals an automobile belonging to a gang of loutish British lads who have been
badgering him. Commandeering their vehicle for a joyride, Eggsy careens
through congested London traffic, driving the vehicle in reverse, with the
police following him nose to nose, as he executes several complicated
maneuvers. Vaughn excels with suspenseful scenes like this careening car
chase. Later, with nobody to help him, Gary ‘Eggys’ Unwin (newcomer Taron
Egerton) contacts Harry. After Harry gets Eggsy out of the clink, he takes
him for a tour of a local tailor’s shop that serves as a front for
Kingsman. Since he feels guilty about the death of Eggys’ dad, Harry
helps the lad compete with other candidates for the job-of-a-lifetime as a
Kingsman. After surviving the gauntlet of an incredible obstacle course,
Eggys stands poised to become a top agent who can match wits and swap fists
with either James Bond or Jason Bourne. Unfortunately, our hero commits
some interesting mistakes before he can redeem himself in the eyes of the
Kingsman and save the world.
Samuel L. Jackson steals the show as goofy looking, Internet
billionaire philanthropist Richmond Valentine. Adopting with a quirky
lisp, Jackson wears his baseball cap askew like a gangsta. Clearly,
Valentine represents Jackson’s best performance since “Pulp Fiction.”
Although the tongue-in-cheek Jackson overshadows handsome Harry Hart and his
unusual arsenal of weapons, Valentine’s number one henchman--perhaps ‘henchm’am
would be better--is a gravity-defying dame equipped with razor-sharp,
'Flex-Foot Cheetah' blade feet, who slices up her adversaries like deli
meat. Nothing can prepare you for Algerian dancer Sofia Boutella of
“StreetDance 2” when she performs her breathtaking acrobatic feats in a
variation on Oddjob and his razor sharp bowler hat from the Bond groundbreaker
“Goldfinger.” Altogether, “Kingsman: The Secret Service” amounts to
amusing but polished nonsense.
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