Thursday, 19 February 2015

Secret Agent Man: Review of Kingsman: The Secret Service

Kingsman: The Secret Service

Director: Matthew Vaughn

By Alex Watson




After nearly sealing the deal with his X-Men reboot, Matthew Vaughn makes a welcome return to the screens. Kingsman: The Secret Service is another wonderfully silly and utterly enjoyable piece of work from this man. Sporting his trademark ability to find humor in the most unlikely of places, Vaughn homage to his love of spy movies is one to remember. Making a hero out of an ASBO figure deserves kudos and in Eggsy, Vaughn has a great new foundation in which to build a franchise.

Gavin 'Eggsy' Unwin (Taron Egerton) is a streetwise youth who is always on the wrong side of the law. That is until one day when a helping hand comes in the form of Harry Hart (Colin Firth) who reveals his father was a top secret agent for an secret organization called Kingsman. Eager to put his old life behind him, Eggsy is recruited to help stop billionaire villain Richmond Valentine (Samuel L Jackson) from using his technology to destroy the world.

Although Kingsman: The Secret Service does suffer from being uneven in places, but these are mistake which are forgivable. The movie possess the typical suave and slick quality to a spy movie where impressive gadgets are on display and spies are able to tell expensive whiskey on taste alone. When Eggsy and Harry are forced together by fate, the resulting chemistry is one that sparkles. Watching Harry effortless dispatch a pub for all vengeful hooligans is bound to raise a smile.

But the most impressive element is by far the diamond in the rough, because Eggsy although sharp around the edges, possessive some genuine smarts. In training he is sneered upon, but rather than get mad he gets determined and a bravery and never say die attitude is uncovered. His character development is as interesting and equally as thrilling as Dave Lizewski in Kick Ass. Vaughn makes a real gem out of a risky character and through it all a real charm goes to life with this character. His heroic during the films slightly wayward final act are worth of a medal and he emerges as a figure we cannot wait to get more of!

Though at the centre of this we have a villain who both bolsters and hinders the movie. Richmond Valentine, the often hilarious lisping billionaire is a tricky one to predict. His serving of McDonald,s as a fancy dinner is one of many surprises. But his reasons for wanting to wreak havoc upon the world just are not strong enough to hold the film together. Though it does launch the film into an unexpected overdrive in time for the final act as we see Harry stab, shoot, kick and punch in a church sound-tracked to Lynard Skynard's 'Free Bird' is a jaw dropping display of high octane violence.

Taron Egerton, in typical Vaughn fashion emerges as another major star from one of his works. Sporting a effortless charisma along with a strong presence on screen, the 25 old is looking like he has a bright future before him! Colin Firth also excels as Harry and bringing his trademark impassive wit and skillful delivery, he makes for the perfect mentor figure. You can only wonder what may have happen with him at the helm of 007? Samuel L Jackson as usual phones in his performance and at times he is compelling as Valentine, but it just doesn't feel like he is giving this one his all!

Matthew Vaughn once again has created another great film out of nothing. This could have been something far worse in the wrong hands, but Kingsman: The Secret Service is one of the funniest and most enjoyable movies of 2015 so far!

1 comment:

  1. Sounds like a film I would enjoy so thanks for the review

    ReplyDelete