Times Colonist

Ritchie serves up a meaty thriller-comedy with The Gentlemen

- MARK KENNEDY

— When we first meet the hero of Guy Ritchie’s new Netflix series, he’s not exactly what you’d expect from a Guy Ritchie hero. He’s a peacekeepe­r for the United Nations, under orders to de-escalate tensions. Can that really last, this being a Guy Ritchie series? Doubtful.

The Gentlemen, a captivatin­g mix of menacing thriller, satire, soap opera, gangster caper and absurdist humour, will eventually have blood splashing on walls, but it delights in the promise of violence more than the acts themselves.

“Like Jaws,” says cast member Max Beesley. “You don’t see that shark for an hour and a quarter of the film. But the idea of it is terrifying, you know? And I think that’s quite clever.”

The Gentlemen, a sort of British take on Breaking Bad, follows an English aristocrat who

inherits his family’s asset-rich but cash-poor estate and farm only to discover that it also has a massive secret weed farm, run by gangsters. At the same time, he urgently needs to bail his bumbling older brother out of massive debt to even more gangsters.

How the newly titled duke navigates this criminal underworld propels the eight episodes.

The series premieres today.

Theo James stars as the duke, and he says he loved the “idea of a man falling down a rabbit hole and learning to love violence and power and what that means.”

James says, “He thinks he knows power because he’s been in the army and he’s part of the aristocrac­y, but he realizes power comes in many forms.”

The Gentlemen has Ritchie’s typical examinatio­ns of criminalit­y, but it’s less hyperkinet­ic and frantic than many of his films like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, allowing scenes to breathe and characters to deepen.

The series has been spun off from the writer-director’s 2019 film of the same name andfeature­s con jobs, a man dancing in a chicken suit, the alwayswelc­ome presence of Vinnie Jones, manic murder chases, gagged hostages, a Lamborghin­i heist, some beheadings and a soundtrack of choirs chanting religious texts.

“We’ve just been given a much bigger canvas,” says Beesley. “The strokes are as thick, the paint is as thick. It’s just a multi-multifacet­ed bit of drama that incorporat­es everything that I think audiences like — drama, comedy, action.”

In Ritchie’s world, the lowclass gangsters who wear tracksuits are the same as the snooty upper classes who wear $50,000 three-piece suits — both groups cultured enough to appreciate the design of a classic Mercedes and a properly decanted 2002 Romanée-Conti.

“He’s making the point that the British landed gentry aristocrac­y really are the original gangsters of the British class society,” says Daniel Ings, who plays the duke’s older brother. “There’s kind of like a need to fight for survival in both of those worlds.”

The series also stars Joely Richardson, Giancarlo Esposito,

Shane Walker and Kaya Scodelario, who plays Susie, a very cool but very no-nonsense underworld captain, who says things like: “Once you start the killing, you have to finish the killing.”

“It was one of the rare times where I instantly knew I wanted to play this character with every fibre of my being. I kind of loved her immediatel­y and wanted to get under her skin,” Scodelario says.

The cast hopes the series can find a worldwide audience despite being rooted in the grand estates of England. It is, after all, about more than a just a duke bluffing his way through the world of criminals.

“The heart of it for me is that it’s a family drama,” says Scodelario. “It’s all these different families realizing that they all need each other to coexist, and they want to protect their family above everything else. And I think that’s just a really interestin­g narrative.”

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Theo James in a scene from The Gentlemen.
NETFLIX Theo James in a scene from The Gentlemen.

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