04 March 2015

TO CHAV AND CHAV NOT

There's a level on which Kingsman: The Secret Service is the movie director Matthew Vaughn has always been destined to make. In fact, that is perhaps true of all of its levels, both the good ones and the bad. On the good side of the ledger, Kingsman is one of the most smartly-crafted action films of recent years, even as it fully subscribes to the heightened aesthetic that has done so much to make action films of recent years noisy, visually incoherent messes. On the bad side, it has some grim, grim thoughts about human beings and society, and it doesn't even seem to be aware of them. And this is intensified by how consciously the film raises political and moral questions that it proceeds to explore with absolutely no depth whatsoever.

But we'll get back to all of that. Adapted by Vaughn and his longtime writing partner Jane Goldman from a 2012 comic miniseries written by Mark Millar (very loosely, I gather; but I do not make a habit of reading Millar's work), Kingsman is the story of a secret intelligence agency operating out of London but without the oversight of any world government, run by the best and brightest of White Male England's upper classes. When one of them dies while attempting to rescue a kidnapped climate scientist, the organisation starts a hunt for his replacement, and its most forward-thinking member, "Galahad", the code name for one Harry Hart (Colin Firth), looks outside of the usual suspects from Oxbridge to nominate a young tough kid, Gary "Eggsy" Unwin (Taron Egerton) from the grubbier places in the city. This is a bad habit of Harry's, we find; his last nominee when this happened 17 years ago was, in fact, Eggsy's dad, who died in the Middle East when Harry himself made a small but deadly blunder. Anyway, the quest to cull the nominees down to just one true Kingsman recruit is carried off with some intense urgency, for as this is all happening, American telecom genius Richmond Valentine (Samuel L. Jackson) is executing an unclear but obviously devious plot to use free cellphone SIM cards against the entire population of the world.

There is a generous and an ungenerous way of looking at this. The generous one, the one that the film literally plops into the mouths of its characters, is that this is all a parody of the James Bond franchise, turning the posh world of British spies with tony accents and impressive educations upside down by throwing a class-shaped wrench into all of it, and holding up the sexism and violence porn of standard-issue spy cinema up for ridicule. In practice, I frankly don't think any of that works, in no small part because Matthew Vaughn doesn't have a good sense of humor. He's able to do jokes, sure: there is an almost non-stop litany of quips and snarky asides and absurdities scattered throughout Kingsman, and some of them are even funny. But it's not sustained enough for this count as parody, and it's damn sure not smart enough for it to count as satire. So really, it's just a particularly self-aware and sarcastic version of the exact thing it set out to comment upon.

Besides which, it's pretty clear that whatever surface-level interest the film has in exploring class (it has infinitely less interest in exploring race or gender, which is probably why the only two people of color in the film to open their mouths are also its villains), that interest doesn't ever last for more than a scene or two. Its central conceit is more based on letting poor urban thugs earn their way into the upper class than it is about providing any kind of dignity to those who aren't upper class, and its politics throughout are absolutely inconsistent, waddling around and cherry-picking what it wants from conservatism (Reagan's Star Wars program is approved of), libertarianism (the heroes are outside the government, the villains are part of it - including, for the briefest of cameos, President Barack Obama), labor (a joke about how awful Margaret Thatcher was), and a particularly unsavory form of American progressivism (the film kills off a bunch of civilians and expects us to laugh through it because they were "just" Westboro Church-style religious bigots). One might go so far as to say that, in fact, the film has no kind of coherent political outlook whatsoever, that its nods towards class-consciousness and the patriarchal mustiness of Bondian superspies are just a pose, and that it's really just a pretext for doing the actioney stuff Vaughn actually cares about. And I would say that one would be totally correct in saying that.

Considering how insistently and repetitively Kingsman articulates its themes, it doesn't actually have any: it's a big action spectacle that tries to pretend like it has any kind of depth at all without doing the things that would give it depth. But the spectacle! -oh the spectacle! I hate to admit it, because it's all so intellectually dishonest, but Kingsman has some unbelievably terrific action, and viewed strictly at a mechanical level, the film is just about flawless. It builds its scenes with clear, one-at-a-time purposes, introducing the characters and the world through punchy, humorous scenes that crank out exposition with just enough flair and wit that it's more entertaining than painful - and it is impossible to undervalue how much Firth is the keystone to all of this, with his effortless line deliveries and self-effacing sense of stuffy English propriety, and his impeccable impatience with everything. When the film eventually commits to making Egerton its solitary lead, as it clearly plans to do from very early on, it loses a great deal of personality and deftness of touch that keep it striding through even the most muddle-headed representational problems.

And having made that structurally wonderful screenplay, the film then lards it up with several absolutely perfect action scenes, that find Vaughn perfecting the style of action preferred by himself and Zack Snyder, as well as their copycats. It's manic, full of quick changes in the film speed, full of zooms and swooshes; and it is beautifully coherent. I am nearly tempted to call it the Rosetta Stone for an entire generation of action cinema: the chaotic, hyper editing that usually results in visual slurries where nothing can be followed suddenly works instead to accentuate the narrative clarity of the fights; the fetishisation of slow-motion, instead of pornishly drawing our attention to pain and blood, serves to punctuate and redirect the action choreography, and call our attention to the shifts in the rhythm of the fighting that drive that redirection. The film's best action setpiece is also its morally ugliest, which doesn't feel like a coincidence at all; it would, in fact, hardly be so ugly if the way it was shot wasn't so tremendously exciting and involving that it makes it impossible to care about all the bodies it's leaving in its wake. Far less problematic is the climax, where unambiguous bad guys are executed in a giddy, openly comic fashion, while the action cross-cuts across three totally different registers of tension (fight the computer, time a perfect shot, evade the armies with guns), serving each of them equally. It's cross-cutting that recalls the climax of Return of the Jedi, and I am not inclined to make that comparison idly.

So the question stands: does Kingsman's excellence as a work of craftsmanship outweigh its illiteracy and amorality as a drama of humans living in the world? Reader, I do not know the answer. I walked into it expecting to hate it, and I walked out having had a good time over a surprisingly fleet 129 minutes. That's enough to swing a positive recommendation, but I can't bring myself to be too enthusiastic about it.

6/10

20 comments:

  1. Based on the "Secret Service" tagline, I has assumed this was a crypto-remake of In the Line of Fire, and am suddenly very disappointed.

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  2. I was wondering how you could possibly like this movie, and actually now I understand. I really enjoyed one action scene (the one in the church), mind; it was incredible, probably the best of that sort I'd seen in months.

    But nothing other than that allowed me to turn off the parts of my brain that had the same problems with it you did. Also, I just loathe characters like Egerton's here. The ones that just grab the audience by the lapels and scream "THIS YOUNG WHITE MAN IS YOU! YOU ARE THIS YOUNG WHITE MAN! ONLY THIS PERSPECTIVE MATTERS!"

    And I've seen all of the James Bond movies. Some of them more than twice. I love John Wick for not doing this, you know?

    Then there's the fridge horror. Sure, Eggsy's little sibling is all right. Are we meant to forget the millions of other babies and toddlers who absolutely were murdered by their caretakers at that same time? Because that must've happened.

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  3. I was having a blast with this one until that church scene and, boy, was it tone deaf and unpleasant. I could barely appreciate the excellent technical aspects of the scene because it was so foul. It was a huge mistake to have a protagonist committing the slaughter. Still, it was three quarters of a great time at the movies.

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  4. Yeah, the church scene is what killed the film for me. Up until then it was fleet and stylish enough that I was able to at least tolerate the iffier moral implications of the script and the annoying pointing-out-genre-cliches-while-conforming-to-them humour, but then that scene came along and... yikes. I don't think of myself as a wilting lily when it comes to morally-ugly action, but I've never felt so viscerally disgusted by something I was clearly supposed to be finding thrilling and fun.

    I didn't think the cross-cutting climax worked that well either - the "time the shot" part of it never felt like it was at any real risk of failing, and the inserts of Eggsy's mother and baby sister just struck me as tasteless Millar-esque edge for edge's sake.

    If the film does have a coherent thematic throughline, I think it's less of a political one and more of Millar's pet theme, "everything sucks and everyone is awful and I'm so fucking smart for pointing that out". Maybe with an undertone of eye-rolling "we're all brainwashed slaves of technology" for flavour.

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  5. Oh, also: Having the bad guy say "I'm not going to explain my nefarious plot because this isn't that kind of movie" and then having a different bad guy explain the nefarious plot all of two scenes later was a bit of hypocritical, self-negating post-modernism worthy of Kevin Williamson.

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  6. I totally disagree in the church scene. The entire pint was that it was a monstrous, inhuman action forced upon the most humane character in the film.

    I think maybe that got lost in his giddily and brilliantly it was constructed but it was not played, to my view, as "WATCH THE WBC GET SLAUGHTERED!"

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  8. You utterly missed the point of the Church Scene! The scene is about how not even the Westboro's deserve this. It gives the audience what they think they want before turning it on their heads. The 99% wipe each other out whilst the 1% stay safe claiming to hate the "sight of blood". The scene is so bloody and over the top to show how bad a potential lower class revolution would turn out. The Inhibitor is an allegory for those in power causing the 99% to turn on and blame each other instead of those with the power.
    That's the entire point of the film!

    Kingsman: The Secret Service posits that those with influence and resources as part of the 1% should use what they have in order to defend and support the overwhelming majority. It’s not about class, or riches, or gadgets that makes you a Kingsman/Gentleman. It’s the attitude. It's a well thought out allegory in the fashion of the original Robocop. an admirably assembled, brutal, action movie that had the smarts to say something meaningful while also being stylish and accessible.

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  9. If the church scene is meant to be read as monstrous and inhuman and unacceptable, why is every single visual and aural cue (the choreography, the pace of the editing, the speed ramping, the hard rock on the soundtrack) screaming out how cool and stylish what we're watching is, how badass Firth's character is even when not in control of himself? Even a director as prone to tone-deafness as Vaughn would know thousands of ways to present that slaughter as something horrible and unpleasant. So if that was the intention, why would he expend so much energy telling us the exact opposite?

    I just don't see anything in the context of the film that allows such a reading of the scene, beyond an inherent assumption of the value of human life, which is not something Vaughn has ever demonstrated prior to this, and which the author of the source material actively rejects at every chance he gets.

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  10. Chris D: The cut-aways to the other characters watching from the outside give the audience the appropriate "in-world" reaction.

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  11. @Shalen - I actually was thinking the same thing when we kept cutting to Eggy's mom trying to kill her child - what about all of the other children who weren't lucky enough to be locked behind solid wood doors from their parents?? Frightening.

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  12. @franklinshepard: Oh good, I'm not the only one!

    I figured the church scene would be divisive. I loved it at the time, disregarding its hypocrisy within the film (THIS IS SO BAD YOU GUYS BUT LOOK HOW COOL IT IS) because at that point I was desperate for anything entertaining to happen.

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  13. I get what the church scene's point is and that's fine, though I'd argue that such a lightweight snappy spoof doesn't need to tackle such heady issues. The problem was the way it was shot, edited, and scored and the decision to have a lead character committing most of the murder. It was meant to impress us and make us cheer, which, sadly, some in my audience did. Setting it in a Westboro-like church to "justify" the carnage somehow made it even ickier. And capping the scene off with having a main character unceremoniously shot in the head really made it one of the more unpleasant ten minutes in recent cinema. It also tainted the grand finale, which, with its marriage of mass hysteria and KC and The Sunshine Band, was actually a hoot (although, I agree, the kid crying as his mom burst through the bathroom door was also a drag).

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  14. As God is my witness, I had somehow managed to completely block the "kid in the bathroom" sequence out of my mind totally. Says just about everything about how fond I was of that bit.

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  15. Yeah, I'm gonna echo most of the other people. I actually went in expecting to like it, and I kept marveling like Tim at how punchy and well-structured the plot was, and how well-shot and -edited it was. But something in its whole tone was just rotten and hypocritical, and by a few hours after it ended I decided I didn't like it.

    The church scene is absolutely in the context of the plot meant to show the evil of the villain's plot. It is also absolutely meant to be experienced as the ultimate in wild, wacky cool. I kind of think Vaughn was maybe trying to do what Tarantino does, by making the violence uncomfortable, and turning back some moral questions on the audience. But he turned out to be terrible at it, and decided he didn't actually care anyway.

    And after all this, is no one going to mention that anal sex joke at the end? I am never the one to bring things like this up, but that was one of the most vile, misogynist "jokes" I've seen in a movie in years, and to have it as the gracenote on your film celebrating mass murder (but only of people who approve of mass murder!) just sickens any entertainment value the movie might have for me.

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  16. I do believe Shalen brought it up in the March Preview comments. But yeah, it's so wildly out-of-place with how largely sexless the whole film has been up to that point, and then it swoops in to give us a horny lad hero of the most fucking awful sort, out of the clear blue sky. It's a remarkably terrible final beat.

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  17. Indeed I did, and I stand by my statement there, viz., fuck that noise. Hollywood action cinema is always doing this thing where if you accomplish a certain thing, women then owe you sex. I think this is because Hollywood is supported by teenage boys, and teenage boys think of girls as sex robots that are hard to operate. The important difference is that many of the teenage boys will grow out of it. Hollywood never will.

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  18. Film Crit Hulk has a *very* different take on this movie, and I think I agree with it:

    http://birthmoviesdeath.com/2015/07/17/film-crit-hulk-smash-kingsman-and-the-maybe-genius-of-non-winking-satire

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  19. Bit late to the party but I must say the Fridge Horror didn't bother me (until now; thanks guys) as much as the Fridge LOGIC: Why doesn't Valentine's "Brown Note" work on babies? For that matter, how the hell does it only work on humans? (Sh*t, I think I just came up with a horror-comedy I want to watch immediately...)

    Speaking as a lady, my reaction to the "Our hero saves the world and gets to kiss the Princess - except this time he's totally gonna f**k her in the butt instead LOL LOL LOL" ending was less outrage and more of a resigned sigh. You tend to do a lot of resigned sighing when you're a woman who likes action movies. :/

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