The sequel to 2015โs hit Kingsman: The Secret Service wonโt make you feel the urgent need to take a shower and/or throw up, like the original probably did. Believe it or not, thatโs not always a good thing. Kingsman: The Golden Circle, Matthew Vaughnโs follow-up to his brutal, joyfully degenerate adaptation of Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons’s 2012 comic book, has been crafted to broaden the seriesโ appeal, to turn it into a legitimate franchise. So, itโs got more stars, more set pieces, more โฆ stuff. The garish violence is still there, as is the profanity. Gone, however, is much of the creativity, the unpredictable, see-what-sticks depravity. The movie has its moments, but the bloat and the blandness take their toll.
The original posited that Kingsman was a group of uber-British secret-secret-secret service of dapper, debonair, high-tech spies who had long operated out of a society of Savile Row tailors. But for some reason, they only ever seemed to function properly as a team after most of them were destroyed or rendered ineffective. In the first film, the bad guys infiltrated Kingsmanโs leadership. This time, most of the group gets destroyed early on, along with their headquarters. Left behind once again are Eggsy, aka Galahad (Taron Egerton), the mouthy young initiate hero from the first film, and Merlin (Mark Strong), who provides tech support โ the Q of the organization.
Tracking clues, they find themselves in Kentucky, in the headquarters of Statesman, their good olโ boy American counterparts, whose front is a distillery rather than a tailorโs shop. Statesman agents wear cowboy hats and leather boots and sport drawls, and are run by garrulous patriarch Champagne (Jeff Bridges); their members are named not after Arthurian legends but after drinks. Thereโs the shit-kicking, trash-talking Tequila (Channing Tatum), not to mention Ginger Ale (Halle Berry), the Americansโ answer to Merlin.
Also, locked away in a white cell, Statesman has Harry Hart (Colin Firth), Eggsyโs mentor, veteran super-agent and star of the first film. When we last saw Harry, he had been shot in the eye after spending a significant chunk of screen time shockingly and expertly slaughtering the entire congregation of a deranged, hate-spewing Southern church; that was the emotional denouement of the first movie (but not the narrative one), the electric moment when we realized the filmmakers were capable of anything. However, franchises need their stars, and Statesman, it turns out, has developed a way to save its heroes from fatal head wounds. Even so, Harry doesnโt remember anything of his Kingsman past; heโs convinced heโs a soft-spoken lepidopterist.
Iโm getting bored just typing all this. The Golden Circle spends a lot of time introducing us to the world of Statesman, and dealing with Harryโs amnesia. The first film, of course, spent a lot of time introducing us to Kingsman, but it did so in the context of a furious competition among Eggsy and other recruits for a spot among the elite agents; the world-building, in other words, was fortified by suspense, character development and narrative drive. Here, itโs more like orientation sessions with a bunch of boilerplate cowboy banter sprinkled in.
Luckily, things do gradually pick up. The villain here is a chipper, powerful drug kingpin named Poppy (Julianne Moore), hiding out in the Cambodian mountains, in a colorful, 1950s-inspired village sheโs built for herself. Sheโs protected by robot dogs and cyborg thugs, and she has kidnapped Elton John, whom she forces to perform for her. Also, she likes to make her henchmen throw each other into meat grinders, then forces them to eat hamburgers made out of their colleagues. Anyway, Poppyโs got a plan to hold the governments of the world hostage by spreading drugs laced with a deadly poison, for which only she has the antidote. Iโm still not sure how Elton John fits into all this, but, being Elton John, he canโt resist the bad drugs and almost dies.
Eventually, Eggsy, Harry, Merlin and the mustachioed Statesman Agent Whiskey (Pedro Pascal), a Burt Reynolds look-alike who wields a retractable electric lasso, have to track Poppy down, and the film manages to deliver a couple of interesting fights and standoffs. Of course, the action theatrics are in line with those from the earlier movie, with their physically impossible, CGI-infused, single-take melees involving inventive uses of random props โ fun, but no longer surprising. (I waited in vain for a single moment as inspired as the originalโs throwaway slow-motion shot of a baddie being stabbed in the face as his own severed hand zoomed by him.)
The jokes, too, feel like retreads from the first film, so that even when theyโre witty, they feel derivative: This time, instead of a heroine offering the hero, ahem, anal sex in exchange for saving the world, we get โ spoiler alert โ Elton John offering Colin Firth โbackstage passesโ to his next concert, with a wink. Thatโs funny, but it doesnโt come out of nowhere like the bizarre original gag did. One could say something similar about this whole movie: It jumps through a million hoops but doesnโt come close to achieving what the first film seemed to do so effortlessly.
This article appears in Sep 14-20, 2017.
