The King's Man
United Kingdom
163913 people rated In the early years of the 20th century, the Kingsman agency is formed to stand against a cabal plotting a war to wipe out millions.
Action
Adventure
Thriller
Cast (4)
You May Also Like
User Reviews
Spak Rida
10/12/2025 16:51
yep still hits different
MAIDI PRO
19/09/2025 18:45
must
Name Reveal 🔜❗️
25/12/2024 02:35
The King's Man_360P
Theophile Tafon
13/12/2024 21:27
👍👍👍
Themba Mbambisa
13/11/2024 10:00
gd
stangazy
19/10/2024 12:48
kings man 😂😂😂 very interesting
offixial
22/06/2024 21:40
love this movie
Kiki❦
30/05/2024 07:22
The King's Man
sandrita bivigha
27/05/2024 11:02
"Real power is not found running off to war. Real power lies in understanding who it is you're truly fighting, and how they can be defeated." Duke of Oxford (Ralph Fiennes)
The tongue is not too far in the cheek with the semi-serious King's Man starring Ralph Fiennes as the dapper but deadly Duke of Oxford, organizer of the sophisticated spy agency that in previous iterations was more satirical of spy stories. In this origin story,
much of the film weaves history around WW I into a fiction about a few good men and women trying to stop the march to war.
The major historical figures are Kaiser Wilhelm, King George, and Tsar Nicholas-all played entertainingly by Tom Hollander. Not to be missed is Rhys Ifans as Rasputin, a diabolical force in getting the Soviet Union to withdraw from the war, to the delight of Germany and the dismay of England.
When Rasputin battles with Oxford, the screen is alive with Russian-style dancing-swordplay, Rasputin's lusts, and plain old good dialogue. Director Matthew Vaughn allows his actors to express themselves wildly but with a modicum of Brit-like decorum fitting of the balance between dark history and playful replay.
Besides the memorable Rasputin swordplay, in the final act, when Oxford uses a new-fangled parachute to storm the supreme villain's high mountain hide out, the stunt work is just short of breathless, coupled with CGI to give a Bondian feel to the spy shenanigans.
I was pleasantly surprised by the imaginative re-creation of history and the low-key humor, so evocative of the Brit stereotype. More than one commentator has suggested how apt Fiennes would be as the new Bond. I don't know about that, but Fiennes sure does know his way around the screen.
"We are the first independent intelligence agency. Refined but brutal, civilized but merciless." Duke of Oxford.
JAWHARI 🪡🪡
14/01/2024 14:15
The King's Man