Director: Guy Ritchie
By Alex Watson
Although it suffers from a rather bland story line, Guy Ritchie's adaption of The Man From U.N.C.L.E is a stylish affair that succeeds as pure entertainment. The dream partnership of Henry Cavill and Armie Hammer is one that make the picture click. Ritchie is gradually making a career on steadily paced action flicks and his good run continues here. This perhaps isn't quite the must see blockbuster as originally intended but there is enough thrills and witty banter for us to want a second helping.
During the cold war both CIA agent Napoleon Solo (Henry Cavill) and KGB agent Ilya Kuryakin (Armie Hammer) are forced to work together to stop a fascist group. Hatred and rivalry is still simmering from an unforgettable first encounter in East Berlin. Thrown into the mix is Gaby Teller (Alicia Vikander), the daughter of a renowned Nazi bomb scientist who is a target for both agencies. Can both men work through their animosity and save the world?
A cool and calculated work from the very get-go, Ritchie opens memorably as we play at cat and mouse game in East Berlin. Through rescuing Gaby, both agents become acquainted when Ilya and his 'barely human' abilities are ably demonstrated as he literally rips the tail off Solo's car. When paired together the result is a fine one as Solo's witty yet insolent humour wonderfully plays off Ilya's embittered intensity. Together the men share the shame goals and underneath all the bickering and one upping there is a fine team underneath. The dueling of minds, car chases and clever tricks from former thief Napoleon give the picture a slick feel that allows it to glide along.
The villains Alexander and Victoria Vinciguerra (Luca Calvani & Elizabeth Debicki) are a little low on taste and have nothing to do little else than look rich and cunning. Centrally the story is one of the few misfires of an otherwise fine ride because outside the cool imagery, it just feels like a standard ride. The original TV series did pride itself on the characters solving a problem a week. This picture though runs out of fuel after a bright start and the picture instead becomes confused on what exactly the prime focus is? Action sequences become less frequent and the picture suffers from a lack of growth through this.
Aside from these forgivable oversights, The Man From U.N.C.L.E is still a great experience and thanks to a wonderful triumvirate it does succeed. Gaby is perhaps the trump card for both men because she truly fears neither. The budding romance between her and Ilya might not completely convince but it does give a great boost in the side laughs department. There is also wonderful late addition of British agent Waverley (Hugh Grant) who shows up to near upstage boyj men with a dry but well-timed sense of funny. Working both as an offbeat buddy comedy and as an action flick, Solo and Kuryakin are a perfect match for one another.
The principle success of Ritchie's film comes from the excellent pairing of Henry Cavill and Armie Hammer. From the start the pair plays off each other magnificently and Cavill's cocky and suave way is matched by Hammer's ferociousness. Refusing to be upstaged, Alicia Vikander holds her own as the tough natured Gaby. Although wanted by both agencies, Gaby firmly makes it clear that she belongs to no one and Vikander gives her a smart edge that helps her stand out. In a brief appearance Hugh Grant also gets a laugh in as Waverley and shows what is perhaps his finest work in sometime.
Guy Ritchie has done a good job developing The Man From U.N.C.L.E and has delivered one of this summers cooler thrillers. It might not be perfect, but it has enough excitement and provides a wonderful threesome to shape a series. Next time it might be a different story... tune in next week to find out!
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