In yesterday's Fight Work, I allued to Matthew Vaughn's skill set as a director which is taking a familiar genre adding elements of anarchic dark comedy and enjoyable set pieces and as such I'm hoping Kingsman: The Golden Circle has more of the same. But how did we get here in the first place? Today we're going to revisit Kingsman: The Secret Service for a refresher course.
The movie centers around Eggsy Uwin (Taron Egerton), a bright but trouble-prone youth who wonders what happens to his dad. But when Eggsy uses a token to get him out of a tight spot he crosses paths with Harry Hart (Colin Firth), a member of a secret group of skill spies known as the Kingsman who also owes Eggsy's father a life debt. Eager to see Eggsy reach his potential, Harry sends the young lad through the service's rigorous training, while he attempts to track down a madman intent on thinning the Earth's herd.
So this sounds like every James Bond movie ever, you might be thinking, what on earth made this movie so appealing? Well it's the James Bond angle and much more.
The movie centers around Eggsy Uwin (Taron Egerton), a bright but trouble-prone youth who wonders what happens to his dad. But when Eggsy uses a token to get him out of a tight spot he crosses paths with Harry Hart (Colin Firth), a member of a secret group of skill spies known as the Kingsman who also owes Eggsy's father a life debt. Eager to see Eggsy reach his potential, Harry sends the young lad through the service's rigorous training, while he attempts to track down a madman intent on thinning the Earth's herd.
So this sounds like every James Bond movie ever, you might be thinking, what on earth made this movie so appealing? Well it's the James Bond angle and much more.
Baby Bond...but R-Rated
While there's plenty of violence, sex, and times to utter bad language, the James Bond films have always had a PG to PG-13 filter to them. No F bombs, no blood, no matter how messed up the situation is or how many guy Bond is mowing down. Kingsman says screw that let's kick it up a knotch and have a young gun do some of the heavy lifting too. It's a great contrast because while Eggsy's journey is all about becoming a gentleman, all of his actions for his gentlemanly group are...basically murder. It's a joke the movie is happy to lean on for most of its runtime.
Great Actors Getting To Let Loose and Have Fun
Colin Firth has played two different versions of Mr. Darcy and won an Oscar for portraying English royalty. Samuel L. Jackson career defining role is one where he carries a wallet that says "Bad motherf***er." I'm telling you this because this adds meta enjoyment to watching Colin Firth shoot people in the face and Samuel L. Jackson play a Bond villain with a lisp who vomits at the sight of blood. These are crazy choices that the movie embraces and it's all the more fun for it.
Matthew Vaughn's Action Scene Acumen
I've already broken down why this movie's signature church massacre is awesome, but Vaughn isn't a one trick pony. The movie is full of stylish violence in bright colors including some of the training sequences, Eggsy's own massive shootout, and the henchwoman with blades for legs played by Sofia Boutella is one of the best Bond foes that never was.
It's All For the Sake of Fun
Sometimes how a film is shot can tell you everything you need to know. The color schemes, how bright the scenes are, this all sets the tone for the film and tells the audience the directors intent. And every frame of Vaughn's Kingsman tells us this is all for a lark. The colors are bright, the scenes are well lit, nearly every moment of seriousness is undercut by a joke. Hell a portion of the finale is a fireworks display of heads exploding. None of this is meant to be taken seriously and because the movie tells us this from the get go we get to turn off our brains and enjoy the silliness. Who's ready for round 2?



















































