Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Film Review - Kingsman:The Secret Service




Spy Hard

Film: Kingsman: The Secret Service
Cast: Colin Firth, Samuel L. Jackson, Taron Egerton
Directed by: Mathew Vaughn
Duration: 2 hrs 10 mins
Rating: * * * 1 / 2

“The James Bond films were only as good as the villain in it” says Valentine, the man with a nefarious plan in Kingsman, played by Samuel L. Jackson. Think of Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Goldfinger, Mr. Big,  Oddjob, Jaws, Scaramanga, Dr Noand you will know how true it is that not only in Bond films, largely all action films are only as good as the villain in it. Kingsman luckily has a mighty good one in the form of an eccentric ex-MIT techie who has plans to reboot mankind on this planet.  

Directed by Mathew Vaughn (of X Men First Class fame) Kingsman draws from the James Bond template and the primary aim is to entertain in the good old fashioned way.  Kingsman is a secret spy agency that operates from a tailor shop, or so it seems. They have all the gadgets in the world to compete with Bond or Ethan Hunt. Harry (Colin Firth) is one of chief operatives and he has a cross to bear when one of his colleague dies during a mission. 

Years later he bumps across Eggsy (Taron Egerton), the son of his dead friend. The young man is not doing anything particularly productive in his life, Harry takes him under his wings and makes him compete with a bunch of other guys and girls for the next Kingsman where their physical and mental skills are truly tested.

Meanwhile, a disgruntled man (Jackson) distributes millions of SIM cards for free – the catch? He can activate aggressive behavior in them with a tap on the keyboard. The Kingsmen have to get together then to, what else, but save the world. There are many standard tropes that the film follows and makes no bones about it. Bond is talked about more than once and Jason Bourne and even Jack Bauer get a mention.

At over 2 hours the length is a slight deterrent, in the middle portion not much happens but the finale is cracking. The heads exploding scene at the end for instance is one of those wow moments where Vaughn gives you more than you expect.

The action is interlaced with humor and there is a fair bit of it, there is as much action as there are some smart quips in the film. And no one believes in being politically correct, the odd humor also stems from this fact.

There is a lot of swearing (hence the adult certificate) although that could have easily been avoided to appeal to a wider audience even without making it like a standard teenage action flick.

Kingsman is your ticket to some harmless entertainment.


Published in The Navhind Times, Goa on 1st March 2015
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