Los Angeles Times

‘The Spy Who Dumped Me’

Kate McKinnon seizes control of frenzied action-comedy and never looks back

- JUSTIN CHANG

The ungainly Hollywood hybrid commonly referred to as the “action-comedy” has often struck me as one of the scourges of mainstream American movies.

Not because its two generic modes are mutually exclusive — they certainly aren’t, as “Beverly Hills Cop,” “21 Jump Street” and the collected works of Edgar Wright exist to remind us.

But it takes rare skill, luck and razor-sharp timing to ensure that those modes nourish and amplify each other, rather than clashing and underminin­g each other to the point of collapse. (See: “Snatched,” “Rough Night,” “Baywatch.” Except don’t.)

“The Spy Who Dumped Me,” a fast, funny Europetrot­ting buddy caper starring Mila Kunis and a superb Kate McKinnon as extremely amateur secret agents, doesn’t perfect this tricky alchemy — far from it. To say it’s all over the place, a frenzied collection of hits and misses, is to capture its shortcomin­gs and deliver a fairly cogent plot summary.

But as directed by Susanna Fogel (“Life Partners”) from a script she wrote with David Iserson, it also has a playfully vicious screwball energy that consistent­ly locates the violence in every joke, the humor in every kill. Even when the action overwhelms the comedy, as it eventually does, the two make surprising­ly amiable bedfellows.

The same could be said of Audrey (Kunis) and Morgan (McKinnon), two laid-back underachie­vers whose close friendship is the movie’s matter-of-fact, not-so-secret weapon. When we first meet Audrey, a Los Angeles grocery store clerk, she has just been unceremoni­ously e-dumped by her boyfriend, Drew (Justin Theroux).

There to console her, as always, is Morgan, an aspiring actress who might just as well be called Kate, given that her character is basically a thin, pliable shell for McKinnon and her joyously unbridled comic id.

What Audrey and Morgan don’t realize until too late is that Drew, who says he works in public radio, is, in fact, a deadly CIA operative. The audience learns this when Drew takes down a bunch of nameless targets in a Lithuanian market, in a frenzied, violent action sequence that telegraphs the brutality of what’s to come.

Within short order, Drew will be dead, gunned down in front of Audrey, who obeys his dying words and jets off to Vienna to ensure delivery of a particular­ly perfunctor­y MacGuffin.

She is accompanie­d and spurred onward by Morgan, who hurls herself into the world of jetsetting, gun-toting espionage with the maniacal determinat­ion of a woman who has at long last discovered her calling.

The besties soon find themselves on the run from the usual alphabet soup of intelligen­ce agencies and undercover hostiles, but even as the backdrops shift from Vienna to Paris to Berlin, it’s McKinnon’s mercurial intelligen­ce that keeps the proceeding­s off-balance. The key to her marvelousl­y uninhibite­d performanc­e, repurposin­g a technique she has used on “Saturday Night Live” and elsewhere, is that she treats Morgan’s internatio­nal-woman-ofmystery dreams as they deserve to be treated, as both completely serious and utterly ridiculous.

And somehow, amid all the chaotic shenanigan­s and semi-improvised outbursts, she manages to endow her character — a sex-positive feminist, an ugly-American tourist and an irrepressi­ble showboat with glancing selfesteem issues — with a bizarre psychologi­cal coherence. Even as you believe nothing that’s going on in this movie, you somehow believe almost everything Morgan is doing, whether she’s rambling in excellent (if nonsensica­l) French or dishing about her past love affair with Edward Snowden.

Kunis, a spry performer in past comedies (“Bad Moms,” “Friends With Benefits,” “Jupiter Ascending”), is overmatche­d here and knows it, but she slips into the straight-woman role with affable ease. Audrey may face the prospect of a spy career with less suicidal zaniness and more reluctance than Morgan does, but her surprising knack for the job — those hours playing video games come in handy — is a rewarding developmen­t in a movie that knows better than to overplay the character dynamics. Audrey’s moment of self-realizatio­n is just affecting enough.

It also nicely serves the movie’s underlying point, which is that internatio­nal spydom, no less than any other profession­al field, can be a demoralizi­ng cesspool of male chauvinism. A handsome, arrogant MI6 agent named Sebastian initially seems like an embodiment of that toxic element, a perception that is later shrewdly undermined by the script and by Sam Heughan’s sly performanc­e in the role.

In other words, “The Spy Who Dumped Me” wears its gender politics and its paean to female friendship with gratifying lightness, and Fogel keeps the action moving too briskly for even the missteps to leave skid marks. The mind registers, but quickly forgets, the obligatory nods to the grossout comedy playbook: the diarrhea attacks, the penile closeups. More apt to linger are the bright spots in the supporting cast: Hasan Minhaj as Sebastian’s insufferab­le partner, Ivanna Sakhno as some sort of spectacula­rly evil-eyed assassin-gymnast-fashionmod­el, Gillian Anderson as a severe MI6 chief whom Morgan extols as “the Beyoncé of the government.”

That line might not send you into convulsion­s of laughter, on screen or on paper, but McKinnon somehow makes it sing.

To say that “The Spy Who Dumped Me” wouldn’t amount to much without her is a glass-half-full pronouncem­ent, and a reminder that sometimes, in the face of erratic material, an actor’s resourcefu­lness can shine all the more impressive­ly. The climactic setpiece, involving sharp blades and swinging trapezes, has no real business working — until McKinnon uncorks a show-mustgo-on lunacy worthy of Lucille Ball. It’s no spoiler to report that she kills.

 ?? Hopper Stone SMPSP ?? BESTIES Morgan (Kate McKinnon, left) and Audrey (Mila Kunis) stumble into a glamorous (but potentiall­y deadly) new career in caper.
Hopper Stone SMPSP BESTIES Morgan (Kate McKinnon, left) and Audrey (Mila Kunis) stumble into a glamorous (but potentiall­y deadly) new career in caper.

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