The Denver Post

“Kingsman” sequel lacks punch of first film

★★55 Rated R. 141 minutes.

- By Mark Kennedy

In the first film about a secret spy group known as Kingsman, we learned they are well-dressed, courtly and perfectly groomed. But by the second film, there’s a decidedly ungentlema­nly whiff about them — of desperatio­n.

“Kingsman: The Golden Circle” comes three years after the first leg in the Matthew Vaughn-directed franchise — and it bodes poorly for the expected third. This sequel is an overlong, labored affair that lacks the fizz of its predecesso­r. Even an insane cameo by Elton John — in his full feather and rhinestone glory — can’t save it.

For anyone needing a refresher, the Kingsman movies are based on a series of comic books by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons that centers on British upper crust spies who combine a fondness for bespoke tailoring with the lethality of James Bond. They hang out in a Saville Row tailor shop, sip tea, are fitted for 007like gadgets and save the world in secret.

The first film introduced the working class Eggsy (Taron Egerton) as a potential recruit who is championed by Kingsman leader Colin Firth, despite the younger man’s crudeness and illbreedin­g. He proved his mettle by foiling a diabolical plan hatched by a billionair­e internet entreprene­ur played by Samuel L. Jackson, whose weird lisp outlasted its welcome.

The charm of the first film was the way it straddled the line between celebratin­g spy movies and mocking them. It had a winking, self-aware humor. Plus, the action sequences were absolutely stunning, with cameras doing 360-degree turns, cool slo-mos and acrobatic fight choreograp­hy. The humor has worn off by the second, even if the camerawork is still spectacula­r. The music is very good, too, from the use of Prince’s “Let’s Go Crazy” to making John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads” into a stirring anthem.

In the sequel , the Kingsman headquarte­rs is under attack and survivors are forced to flee to their distant American cousins — Statesman, a similar spy agency hidden in a Kentucky whiskey brewery. Firth is back and sorely missed as the Kingsman leader. The trouble is we watched him die in the first film and having him resurrecte­d seems weak.

The solid Egerton and the always excellent Mark Strong are back as Kingsmen, and Julianne Moore takes over from Jackson as the evil mastermind, a drug kingpin with a love for old-fashioned diners. She proves deliciousl­y campy in her controlled ferocity. Cross her and you’ll end up in a meat grinder. Your successor will likely munch on you in a hamburger, yum.

On the Yankee side, Channing Tatum has ob- viously been cynically added for pure eye candy appeal and he misses most of the movie, anyway. A subdued Halle Berry seems to be in another project entirely, one quiet and introspect­ive.

Jeff Bridges, as the leader of the American team, may have signed on simply to be able to sample the free bourbon. Pedro Pascal, in a cowboy hat and mustache, plays his part as a misogynist­ic spy like he’s a member of “Anchorman.” Speaking of casting, why are there so many dogs in this film? Like, WAY too many dogs — puppies, old dogs, stuffed and even robotic.

If the first film drew its magic from a “My Fair Lady”-like attempt by Firth to prove breeding doesn’t determine gallantnes­s, the sequel lacks a central idea. The British-American divide in spy styles is soon abandoned and a sometimes overly heavy debate over the war on drugs drags the film in a darker direction.

Ooverall this sequel suffers from sequel-itis — a big-budget movie that rushes from Italian mountains to Cambodian rain forests but has lost the spark of its predecesso­r.

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 ?? Giles Keyte, Twentieth Century Fox ?? From left, Taron Egerton, Colin Firth and Pedro Pascal star in “Kingsman: The Golden Circle.”
Giles Keyte, Twentieth Century Fox From left, Taron Egerton, Colin Firth and Pedro Pascal star in “Kingsman: The Golden Circle.”

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