2022年3月2日水曜日

The King's Man

In January 2022, I watched The King's Man at Movix Kameari for the first time. The spy action film starring Ralph Fiennes was released in 2021 and is a prequel to the first and second installments starring Taron Egerton and Colin Firth in the Kingsman series.

It follows the story of Orland Oxford who is a former serviceman, a British aristocrat, a duke and performed by Ralph Fiennes. The Duke of Oxford commits espionage himself in order to resolve the problems of the world behind World War I and then the duke starts a private spy organization named Kingsman that does not belong to a nation.

I like Ralph Fiennes because the actor gave wonderful performances as the villains to gentlemen such as a Shutzstaffel officer who the war has made kind of go mad in Schindler's List, a serial killer in Red Dragon, a horrible wizard in the Harry Potter series, a politician in Made in Manhattan and a British diplomat in The Constant Gardener. In some years Fiennes has also acted well as gentlemen who was supporting with a presence in No Time to Die and Official Secrets, so I was kind of surprised by his fighting scenes where he drove himself in his latest movie. He also seemed to run wild so as to compete with Liam Neeson and Harrison Ford who look like him and are good in action. He could have kept safely acting a gentleman without danger because he was fully mature, however, I felt that he would just have wanted to drive himself. Ralph performed well as the duke of Oxford who energetically acts for the world with a sense of mission. His action was wonderful too.

I regretted that the younger actors did not flourish so much compared with the first and second movies in the series. I wanted to watch the acting of Harris Dickinson as Orland's son and Gemma Arterton as the duke's secretary more. Not that I did not like Fiennes' performances. I might have just asked too much or I felt that way because the duo Taron Egerton and Colin Firth acted far more wonderfully in the former two ones.

The flick depicts World War I in a comical manner. I have become interested in Rasputin only whose name I had known since I watched it, though I honestly felt that it was just good. However, I will be intrigued with how the sequel describes events behind World War II if it is filmed

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