COMIC BOOK TEEN SPIES
SPRING TO FILM IN “KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE”
Ther ebels yet the
wittiest of teen spies are about to save the world in “Kingsman: The Secret
Service” based upon the acclaimed comic book by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons, directed
by Matthew Vaughn (“Kick-Ass,” “X-Men
First Class”) starring Colin Firth, Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Caine, Mark
Strong, Taron Egerton and Sophie Cookson. “Kingsman:
The Secret Service” tells the story of a super-secret spy
organization that recruits an unrefined but promising street kid into the
agency’s ultra-competitive training program just as a global threat emerges
from a twisted tech genius.
When the father of five-year-old Gary “Eggsy” Price
(Egerton) sacrifices his life in the line of duty during a classified military
exercise, his family is given an unconventional medal – and a phone number they
may use only once, should they need a favor of any kind. Seventeen years later, Eggsy is an unemployed school dropout living a dead-end
existence in his mother’s flat. After he is arrested for joyriding, Eggsy uses
the medal to secure his release from jail, and finds himself rescued by Harry
Hart (Firth), an impeccably suave spy who owes Eggsy’s father his life.
Dismayed to learn of the path Eggsy has taken, yet
impressed by his better qualities, Harry offers Eggsy the opportunity to turn
his life around by trying out for a position with Harry’s employers: Kingsman,
a top-secret independent intelligence organization. Eggsy must make it
through the highly competitive and often perilous series of tests that each
prospective new Kingsman agent must pass, while also dealing with the emotional
struggle of being a social outcast in an environment where everyone else is
well-educated, well-connected and well-mannered.
“The film is a blend of everything I
learned from making Lock Stock, Snatch, and
Layer Cake, which were gangster
movies, as well as my comic book films Kick-Ass
and X-Men: First Class, notes
director and co-writer Matthew Vaughn.
The concept
for Kingsman: The Secret
Service was born when Vaughn had a conversation “down the pub” with comic book author
Mark Millar. They had successfully collaborated together
on Kick-Ass and
were talking about their love of the spy genre. “It
was two fan boys letting rip and weirdly we’re in a position where the fantasy can become a reality.
We talked about
spy movies. I love genre movies. I’m an adult with a kid’s heart in so many ways. For
me, the genre was defined
by the Roger Moore James
Bond films and movies like In Like Flint and TV shows The
Man From U.N.C.L.E and The Persuaders. I also loved the Harry Palmer films,”
Vaughn tells.
“Those are the movies that fueled my love for the spy genre when but over time they seemed to get more and more serious and gritty. From the knee jerk reaction against
the fun of Austin Power, you got Jason Bourne, Jack Bauer, and then Bond followed that route, leaving a hole in the market, as far as I’m concerned.”
Over the course of several more conversations Vaughn and Millar
decided to develop the idea of an elite spy for the 21st century.
“That begged the question, what is a modern gentleman spy? What would he be like?” he says.
Millar, with illustrator Dave Gibbons, began working on the graphic
novel, The Secret Service, which was published in 2012. Meanwhile, Vaughn and
his regular writing
partner, Jane Goldman, were working on the screenplay for Kingsman: The Secret Service.
Vaughn wanted his film to hark back to that golden age of spy thrillers
– an action packed story, with humor in the right places, and featuring spectacular set piece sequences
and vivid characters
who inhabit a fully conceived
world. As he says, “It’s all about emotion,
humor and being wowed by spectacle.”
One of many standout
action scenes feature Eggsy and his fellow Kingsman trainees
submerged underwater and was, Vaughn admits, a nightmare to film. “I’ve got to say that was one of the hardest days I’ve ever filmed in my life. Filming underwater is an absolute
nightmare, and filming underwater with ten actors is the stupidest bloody
thing. I remember thinking, ‘why the hell
did I write this scene?’ I rewrote a lot of the scene
on the day, after trying to film it for five hours. It was actually
far more complicated, so I went, ‘Okay, we are simplifying this right
now.’ But we got it.”
Another remarkable sequence features
Firth as Harry Hart in a mass fight inside a church. “It took six days to film that. It’s a floating
camera, so it’s sort of hand- held, but it’s also got a rig on top of it so that it can go on a bungee sort of rig, where it can go up and down, and follow the action.
“It was very, very well planned out and we do everything before on video,
so filming is actually probably the easiest part of it. I have figured
out every shot, that sort of action does not happen
by making it up on the day. I had so much fun making this, and we challenged each other, and it was a real team effort, and it was fun.”
“Kingsman: The
Secret Service” opens February 18 in theaters across the nation from 20th
Century Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros.
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