Review #001 – Kingsman: The Golden
Circle
Released: September 22, 2017
Viewed: September 23, 2017 7:10 PM
Writing start time: 10:30 PM
Kingsman: The Golden Circle is the
sequel to 2014's Kingsman: The Secret Service, an action movie which
surprised me with its originality and fun. I was excited to see that
the universe of the Kingsmen would get revisited, and more
importantly to me, expanded upon in its sequel.
The original movie featured the
Kingsmen, a super spy organization that both winked at and embraced
the absurdities of the Tuxedo and Martini spy flicks of old, not the
least of which the James Bond franchise, which itself is acknowledged
in-universe several times. It featured Taron Egerton as Eggsy, a
lower class street tough with lots of potential, who is plucked from
his situation by Galahad, played by Colin Firth, who owes a debt to
Eggsy's family. The movie had a good theme of potential trumping
social class with a scathing rebuke of the complacency of governments
towards violence as a means to an end. It also has a scene where a
multitude of heads explode in cadence to Pomp and Circumstance. No,
really.
The marketing for the sequel promised a
movie that carried the same beats as the first but expanded on its
universe. In some ways this movie succeeds in fulfilling that promise
but it does so with less confidence and finesse than the first. The
Golden Circle introduces the Statesmen, an American counterpart spy
agency that uses a laid back cowboy aesthetic as a foil to the stuffy
British upper class motif of the Kingsmen. This gives us a new set of
characters to explore but very little is done with them. It's nice to
see Jeff Bridges, Halle Berry and even Channing Tatum as core members
of this new group but none of their characters get a chance to exceed
two dimensions.
Even the Kingsmen have a hard time
achieving much depth. Eggsy himself completed his character arc in
the first movie and is left to float along here. Galahad is back and
he is given little to do except to provide callbacks to the first
film. Mark Strong's character, Merlin, the tech wizard/drill sergeant
of the Kingsmen, has character beats that fall flat and are
completely unearned. The saving graces are the villain, Poppy, played
by Julianne Moore, a drug cartel kingpin that wants to use capitalism
to legalize her stake in the drug trade and an extended celebrity
cameo that saying too much would give away the game.
Poppy's ambitions make a pretty big
political statement, especially in the face of a certain government's
response to it and, honestly, if this theme was properly explored it
might have made for a more engaging conflict and a more interesting,
but completely different, movie in its own right. Unfortunately, said
evil plan imperils millions of lives so the heroes must step in to
save the day and any potential there is lost.
Saving the day in a big way through
awesome and sometimes hilarious set pieces was the major reason the
first movie stood apart from its peers and happily some of that fun
and ingenuity stays intact to its sequel. Deliberate attempts are
made at recreating the magic of some of the original's big moments.
Instead of inventing new ideas whole cloth, some twists to the
original's are introduced and exploited but the feeling of deja vu
can't be shaken. The big fights themselves are often inferior due to
an increased use of confusing camera movements, shaky cam and
less-than-perfect framing.
One non-action scene in particular is
very troublesome. To inject some drama into Eggsy's relationship, he
gets involved in a seduction scene that very much gives a counter
argument to the “show, don't tell” adage. This is going to be the
one scene of the movie that will make repeat viewings pretty tough
and more should be written about it in a spoiler-filled article. From
my understanding much is already being said.
Overall
I got a movie that is a mixed bag. There is some fun to be had but
there is also quite a bit of wasted potential and more and more
questions and doubts are creeping into my head as I write this
review. As it is, I am nearly at the end of my one hour writing
allowance. More should be said about this movie, I think, as
comparing the two Kingsman films would lead to excellent exercises in
analyzing what does and does not work in writing screenplays.
Two
and a half stars. Action fans ought to get a kick out of this but for
more casual viewers I'll recommend the first movie any day of the
week.
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