The premise is
pretty much familiar. A young man gets the opportunity of his life when he is
asked to
appear for the ‘most dangerous’ job interview on earth. That portion,
which comes after a few escapades of the promising but wayward young man, is
perhaps the most serious part of the movie. There are six young people who want
to become ‘Lancelot’ and only one of them can be. The tests and the way the
young people respond to them are interesting to watch. It shows that sometimes
what matters more is not one’s intelligence but the willingness to stick with
others through thick and thin. You’ll enjoy the skydive portion. One only
wonders why the three men who were also in contention to be Lancelot had to be
portrayed as such complete assholes. We hear something about ‘positive
discrimination’, but it seems a bit unfounded.
In parallel,
opens the ‘megalomaniac’ plot. Now, he has a plan that is one of the most
devious and outrageous ones that we have seen in recent times. Something like
the ‘end of the world’ schemes that we used to get in the old Superman movies.
Does our young man get to be Lancelot, and how the plan of the megalomaniac is
foiled is what Kingsman is all about.
The one weakness
you can spot about Kingsman is that it seems sometimes to be stuck in tow
minds. Does it want to be Bond or does it want to be MIB? You get mixed
signals, not knowing when to take the movie seriously and when not to. You are
caught by surprise when the first serious twist arrives because you aren’t
expecting it. But, the script oscillates between being serious and being fun,
which keeps you smiling, but can be an irritant for some very serious
audiences.
The good thing
however is that Kingsman never slows down. The script is always moving ahead
fast. You really do not get time to think, even though there are many
convenient liberties taken through the course of the film and gadgets for all
purposes seem to pop out from nowhere like an ‘amnesia-inducing’ injection from
a watch (maybe a nod to the ‘flashy thing’ from MIB), bulletproof umbrellas and
transmitter fitted top hats (that the megalomaniac wears when he is sitting
inside a private jet!). These gadgets, however far fetched they may seem, are
fun to watch and take us back to the old Bond times.
There are a
couple of fights that take violence to a whole new level of gore. The mood of
the movie
never really sets us up for this which is the reason you will be
surprised when it actually happens. But the movie keeps injecting wit here and
there to keep you in a pleasant mood rather than a tense one. There is one
notable deviation from the old Bond films however. As a conversation goes,
‘this is the point where I tell you my big convoluted plan, and then you find
an equally convoluted way to escape, just like in the old movies’. But no,
‘this is not that kind of movie bruv’! You’ll love that twist.
Kingsman is fun
because of what the senior Lancelot said so rightly; ‘I felt the old Bond
movies were only as good as their villain’. Samuel Jackson plays a quirky
self-righteous environmentalist who thinks he is Noah, trying to save the
world, only he’s got it all wrong. Without him, Kingsman would have ended up as
the senior version of Spy Kids. Colin Firth is his classy self, and its nice to
see him in some frenetic action. Michael Caine effortlessly stamps class with
just a few dialogues and Mark Strong delivers a quite understated performance
that has some witty lines. Taron Egert is a promising young talent.
Kingsman makes
you feel you’ve had a good time. Yes, it never stops once it gets into top
gear. It’s fun, has an outlandish plot, some no holds barred action, a
spectacle of blown up heads, a femme ‘blade runner’ fatale, a climax that might
remind you of Mr. India and then a finish on a funny/sensuous note that is a
tribute to Bond. Go for Kingsman; it may not all make sense, but it surely is a
whole lot of fun. This one deserves a sequel!
Verdict: A
thorough joyride!
Stars: 3/5
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