Director Matthew Vaughn casts Newbies in “Kingsman: The Secret Service”
Newcomers Taron Egerton, Sophie Cookson and Sofia Boutella debut in
Matthew Vaughn’s highly-thrilling “Kingsman: The Secret Service” along with
cinema’s iconic and most respected actors Academy Award winners Michael Caine
and Colin Firth, Mark Strong and Samuel
L. Jackson based on Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons’ acclaimed
comic book “The Secret Service.”
Vaughn is known
for taking risks in casting talented unknowns in his movies who have gone on to
become major stars such as Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Chloe Grace Moretz who were
just starting out on their careers when he chose them for Kick-Ass.
In “Kingsman: The
Secret service,” Vaughn once again trusted his instincts when he pluck three
newbies to star alongside Caine, Strong, Firth and Jackson – out from more than
a hundred of hopefuls, Taron Egerton was chosen to play lead young spy recruit as
Eggsy along with Sophia Cookson battling all odds against their young villain
counterpart in Sophia Boutella.
When the father
of five-year-old Gary “Eggsy” Unwin sacrifices his life in the line of duty
during a classified military exercise, his family is given an unconventional
medal – and a phone number they may use only once, should they need a favor of
any kind. Seventeen years later, Eggsy (Egerton) is an unemployed school
dropout living a dead-end existence in his mother’s flat. After he is arrested
for joyriding, Eggsy uses the medal to secure his release from jail, and finds
himself rescued by Harry Hart (Firth), an impeccably suave spy who owes Eggsy’s
father his life. Dismayed to learn of the path Eggsy has taken, yet impressed
by his better qualities, Harry offers Eggsy the opportunity to turn his life around
by trying out for a position with Harry’s employers: Kingsman, a top-secret
independent intelligence organization.
Eggsy must make it through the highly competitive and
often perilous series of tests that each prospective new Kingsman agent must
pass, while also dealing with the emotional struggle of being a social outcast
in an environment where everyone else is well-educated, well-connected and
well-mannered. With Harry’s help, Eggsy learns to become both a gentleman and a
spy – but will he triumph over his rivals for the coveted position at Kingsman?
Casting a young actor capable of embodying Eggsy and
his journey from errant street boy to suave secret agent was an enormous
challenge. With the film deep in pre-production and most of the other roles
cast, Vaughn was still trying to find his Eggsy. “Finding a talented young actor is hard,”
notes Vaughn. “And finding one that can carry a movie is even harder. Taron had
never done a movie, but you get a feeling about someone. When Jennifer Lawrence
came in to play Mystique [in Vaughn’s X-Men: First Class] she was just 19, but
as soon as you turned the camera on her you knew that she had something. It was
the same with Taron.”
Egerton described the process of shooting the film as
“scary, but wonderful. What more can any young actor want? It really is a dream come true and I feel
lucky to be one of the few people in the world who can genuinely say that.”
“Eggsy is a tough role to pull off,” notes Vaughn.
“He is a street kid who becomes a gentleman.
He must be credible at portraying both, while also being likeable, which
isn’t easy. But Taron’s done it with real aplomb.”
All of the Kingsman recruits give Eggsy a run for his
money, but in Roxy, played by Sophie Cookson, Eggsy finds what Jane Goldman
calls “a worthy opponent. They’re buddies and rivals and there’s a respect
between them. In a way, that’s part of
our divergence from James Bond; there isn’t a romance between them and it isn’t
just about him bedding women.”
It was this aspect of Roxy’s personality that drew
Cookson to the part. “I’m quite tired of reading scripts where women are
over-sexualized and it’s all about being an accessory to a leading man,” she
explains. “Roxy isn’t like that. She has her own objectives and ambitions and
she’s very much her own entity. Roxy is one of two female candidates for
Kingsman, so she’s surrounded by a little too much testosterone. She feels an
affinity towards Eggsy, even though they’re very different.”
Jackson plays his Valentine role to perfection, but a
perfect villain is lost without a great henchman, rather henchwoman beside him
in “Kjngsman: The Secret Service” where Sophia Boutella precisely kicks and
slashes every encounter with the elite spies to protect her master. Boutella
plays Gazelle, a beautiful, super-smart double amputee with deadly running
blades. She’s a killing machine. “She’s called Gazelle because she’s in total
control of her legs,” explains Algerian model-turned-actress Sofia Boutella,
who takes on the role. “Gazelle wears prosthetics that, when she’s fighting,
unleash razor sharp blades, which makes her very dangerous.”
In “Kingsman: The Secret Service,” Matthew Vaughn
plays with the conventions of a well-known genre – twisting and subverting, but
never denigrating, them. Summing up, he
says: “It’s a modern love letter to
every spy film ever made but told in a very irreverent, fun way. I wanted it to
be truly entertaining and capture the spy films of the ‘60s and ‘70s in a
modern manner. Kingsman: The Secret Service is very postmodern in the sense it
has a lot of references to those films, but it’s reinventing them.”
Watch the official trailer of “Kingsman: The Secret Service” here:
A new breed of spies will save the world when “Kingsman: The Secret Service” opens February 18 in cinemas nationwide from 20th Century Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros.
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