Kingsman The Secret Service Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Kingsman The Secret Service quiz and we will tell you which Kingsman The Secret Service character you are. Play it now.

One criticism that has dogged the James Bond franchise throughout the years is the undeniable fact that despite the fact that the films appear to be filled with gratuitous sex and violence in theory, they never quite manage to show them in any great detail on screen. This is one of the complaints that has plagued the franchise throughout the years. Can you imagine what it would be like if a Bond movie included all of the seedier elements that they have only hinted at in the past? Obviously, the decision to imply more than display has served the producers well for more than half a century, but do you have any idea what it would be like? The early word on the over-the-top action-comedy “Kingsman: The Secret Service” seemed to suggest that it would pay homage to the Bond films of old—the ones made before the series took its turn towards the relatively serious with the arrival of Daniel Craig—while also including all of the Good Parts that had been largely absent from the previous films in the series. This was despite the fact that the film would be an action-comedy with a ridiculous amount of gore and The result is a mess that plays like “The Man with the Golden Gun” with ridiculous amounts of gore and severed limbs on display, though the nipples this time around are not so much superfluous as they are distressingly nonexistent. Unfortunately, it seems to have taken its inspiration from one of the less successful Roger Moore efforts rather than the classic Connerys, and the result is a mess that is occasionally amusing but increasingly tedious and occasionally appalling.

The film “Kingsman,” which is based on the comic book written by Mark Millar and illustrated by Dave Gibbons, tells the story of a top-secret British espionage group that is inspired by King Arthur and his knights (whose names the members appropriate for their code names), is based in a seemingly ordinary Savile Row tailor shop, and routinely saves the world without getting into all of the political mumbo-jumbo that has affected the efforts of governmental spy organizations. Gary “Eggsy” Unwin (Taron Egerton), a seemingly ordinary young punk who lives with his mother and her abusive boyfriend, and spends his days getting into dumb trouble, is put forward as the group’s nominee by agent Harry “Galahad” Hart (Colin Firth), who has lost his Lancelot as a result of a one-man effort to rescue a kidnapped scientist (Mark Hamill). The group begins the process of recruiting a replacement for Eggsy’s father, on the other hand, was a Kingsman in the past and sacrificed his life to save Harry and others when Harry was just a young boy. Eggsy is his son.

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Eggsy appears to be out of place among the significantly more sophisticated other candidates; only Roxy (Sophie Cookson) treats him with any kindness or respect, and Arthur (Michael Caine), the leader of the Kingsman, anticipates that he will be eliminated relatively quickly. Eggsy, who has been under Merlin’s watchful eye the entire time, is the only one of the group that manages to make it through the rigorous testing that was designed to eliminate all but one candidate (Mark Strong). This turns out to be slightly more intense than, say, the executive training program at Harrods—their barracks are quickly flooded while they sleep on one night, there is a group skydive where they are informed that one of them is not packing a chute only after they make the jump, and they are each given a puppy to raise and train as their own companion animal. (Eggsy gives his dog the name “JB,” and in one of the film’s funnier jokes, we find out that many fictional super-spies over the years have shared those initials.)
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A megalomaniacal psychopath is currently devising a nefarious scheme that will have repercussions on a global scale while all of this is taking place, of course. Our archenemy is Valentine, played by Samuel L. Jackson. He is an extraordinarily wealthy technological pioneer who, out of frustration at his inability to save the world through the traditional channels, has resorted to a more sinister approach. This approach involves zapping the minds of the population of the world via their cell phones and driving them to kill each other off. He has also been recruiting celebrities and other dignitaries and kidnapping them so that they can help to forge a better world once the riffraff has been eradicated. Of course, not everyone will be killed, and he has been doing both of these things. If you require any further evidence that Valentine is irrational, consider the fact that he steals Iggy Azalea but evidently does nothing for Charli XCX, despite the fact that it was her amazing chorus on “Fancy” that made that song the hit that it was. If you require any further evidence that Valentine is irrational, consider this.

Kingsman The Secret Service Quiz

I suppose in concept it could be entertaining, and there are a few funny instances of rude irreverence here and there, but after a while the giddiness can become a bit wearing. The screenplay for this film, written by director Matthew Vaughn and his longtime collaborator Jane Goldman, is kind of like the espionage equivalent of the movie “Scream.” All of the characters have seen all of the James Bond films, and they make frequent references to the tropes that have been established in those films. However, given that the James Bond films have never had a reputation for being known for their ability to take themselves seriously, what we have here in “Kingsman” is a film that makes cartoonish jokes about films that were frequently cartoonish jokes.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Kingsman The Secret Service quiz.

Oddly enough, the fact that “Kingsman” is extremely graphic in its depiction of violence was another aspect of the film that I found to be off-putting. Vaughn, whose previous credits include “Kick-Ass,” another savagely brutal adaptation of a Mark Millar comic book, floods the screen with flying limbs and spurting blood throughout, and even though it is all done in a deliberately cartoonish and nihilistic manner, it is still way too much of a not-that-great thing. This may sound like a contradiction of my previously stated desire for a more overtly violent Bond film.

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On the other hand, the scene in which Valentine tests his weapon on a church congregation that is styled after those Westboro Baptist creeps is extremely grotesque. The concept of hateful monsters literally destroying each other, to the soundtrack strains of “Free Bird,” no less, sounds funny, but it goes on for so long and is so brutal (including spearings, shootings, and an ax to the throat), that the joke is lost in the process. In the meantime, the sexual content is strangely absent, with the exception of a subplot involving a kidnapped Swedish princess who makes Eggsy an offer to save the world in exchange for specific sexual favors and then—spoiler alert—makes good on her promise. This subplot is not particularly funny.
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The film “Kingsman: The Secret Service” does not come devoid of any redeeming qualities. Firth, Caine, and Strong are clearly having fun with their parts, and it is amusing to see Firth dressed to look like Harry Palmer, the rival Sixties-era British spy who was once played by Caine. While Egerton is fairly anonymous as the callow would-be Kingsman, Firth, Caine, and Strong are clearly having fun with their parts. (On the other hand, Jackson is not quite as successful as the wildly lisping villain because, due to the fact that the character does not make very much sense, he never quite manages to get a fix on him.) Vaughn is an undeniably stylish filmmaker, as he has demonstrated in superior efforts such as “Layer Cake,” “Stardust,” and “X-Men: First Class.” And while this may not be a good movie, it is certainly a good-looking one. Also, the concept has a lot of potential, and who knows, maybe by the time they get around to making the next film in the franchise that they are obviously laying the groundwork for, they will have figured out how to properly set the mood, and as a result, they will have produced an even better movie. After I came out of “Kick-Ass,” of course, I said the exact same thing, and we are all aware of how that situation turned out.

For more personality quizzes check this: Kingsman The Secret Service Quiz.

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