Director 
Matthew Vaughn brings us a jet-fueled tribute to the classic Bond films with this adaptation of Mark Millar’s and Dave Gibbons’ graphic novel 
The Secret Service and once again Vaughn greatly improves on the source material.
I love the Daniel Craig Bond movies but it was the Connery/Moore Bond
 films that I grew up on so I’ll always have a soft spot for 
supervillains with world conquest issues, lethal henchmen and mountain 
strongholds all which this movie ticks off like a fan boy’s wet dream. 
The story is pretty much an amped up version of 
Moonraker where the supervillain, in this case a technology tycoon named Valentine (
Samuel L. Jackson)
 wants to save the Earth by wiping out the bulk of its population, but 
unlike Hugo Drax Valentine’s plan is vastly more violent and even less 
“altruistic” as his chosen survivors are decidedly not picked for 
perfect breeding stock.
“Hey, a world full of genetically perfect people would be soooo boring.”
Enter the Kingsman a secret intelligence agency set up to work 
outside of all world governments thus avoiding the corruption of local 
politics. Chief among these agents is Harry Hart (
Colin Firth)
 codenamed Lancelot who dresses sharply in a Savile Row suit and can 
take a room full of thugs down without breaking a sweat. Now seventeen 
years ago on a mission an agent died protecting his fellow Kingsman and 
Harry personally delivered the medal of valor to the widow and her 
little boy saying that if ever they need a favor just call the number on
 the back of the medal.
“Unless you have ghosts, then you best call Ghostbusters.”
The little boy grows up to be Eggsy (
Taron Egerton)
 who doesn’t get along with his mother’s abusive boyfriend or his gang 
of toughs. When Eggsy’s rough and tumble nature lands him in jail he 
uses his one phone call to call the number on the medal. Harry shows up 
and explains to Eggsy about his father, the Kingsman and his possible 
future with the organization. Playing Junior James Bond seems better 
than being beaten up daily so he agrees to the training.
He does make a rather nice Harry Palmer.
Structurally speaking there isn’t much of anything original going on 
in this movie; you get the standard training clichés, the asshat fellow 
recruits that give him a hard time, the tough female recruit that is our
 hero’s sole friend, and the tough but likable taskmaster (
Mark Strong).
 So basically you are really getting two films in one; first you have 
your James Bond tribute with a world conquering supervillain and then 
you have your young adult action adventure film in the vein of 
The Hunger Games and 
Divergent.
“And may the odds be ever in your favor.”
The action is quite stylish and over the top and both Colin Firth and
 Taron Egerton give top notch performances as super spies but for me the
 standout performances are all on the villains side as Samuel L. 
Jackson’s villain is a bizarre lisping character who is adverse to 
watching violence and simply put too fun to not love. He’s what you’d 
expect if his character from 
The Spirit had a more eccentric twin brother.
“Should I quote a Bible verse or call some one a Motherfucker?”
And what supervillain would be without a good henchman or in this 
case a henchwoman. This role is marvellously filled by Gazelle (
Sofia Boutella)
 a double amputee whose lower legs have become lethal weapons that can 
cut through steel as well as heroes. She easily outclasses the likes of 
Jaws and Oddjob by proving that the female really is more deadly than 
the male.
She has a real spring in her step.
The only criticism I have for the film is that training sequences 
with Eggsy proving his metal against fellow recruits could have been 
greatly reduced. All his fellow recruits were just bland two dimensional
 characters that offered nothing to the story and when your film is over
 two hours long you need to cut that crap out. And if you are in a 
cutting frame of mind maybe they could have done some trimming during 
the big action finale as it did seem to go on a bit long, but really 
that is all in retrospect because as I was watching it I was having too 
much of blast to care.
Is this the greatest action spy thriller out there? Of course not, 
but it was incredibly fun as it paid loving homage to the films that 
came before and it’s clear that Matthew Vaughn has great affection for 
the genre. So for fun escapist entertainment I can highly recommend 
Kingsman: The Secret Service. It will at least hold us over until 
Avengers: Age of Ultron comes out.
And let’s not forget we get Michael Caine as the leader of the Kingsman and he is always a pleasure to watch.
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