Movies

Argylle movie review: Henry Cavill plays a Bond-like secret agent in espionage thriller from Kingsman director Matthew Vaughn


2.5/5 stars

Argylle is so meta that it hurts. The film throws thriller writer Elly Conway (Bryce Dallas Howard) into a real-life espionage conspiracy that is somehow based on her fictional characters. Her two worlds collide in a story that piles reversals on top of reversals.

Elly transforms from stay-at-home writer to globe-trotting fugitive under the guidance of a bearded, dishevelled Aidan (Sam Rockwell), the opposite of her fictional, Bond-like secret agent Argylle ( Henry Cavill). Aidan wears jeans and T-shirts; Argylle favours tailored Nehru jackets. But both are expert at what counts: killing bad guys.

Jason Fuchs’ screenplay may be complex, but it is not especially original. Movies love confounding authors by bringing their characters to life, usually to teach lessons about appreciating the “real world”; an actual Argylle novel has been published, although the book has only tangential connections to the movie.

One interesting twist here is that Elly relates so much to Argylle that she turns to him for advice, even in the midst of shoot-outs and car chases. And the agent will often interrupt his scenes to complain to her about his dialogue.

Elly and Aidan go from Colorado in the United States to London, the south of France and a palace on the Arabian peninsula. At each stop, they gather clues and shoot their way out of traps, then move on to the next cliffhanger.

Dua Lipa and John Cena in a still from “Argylle”.

Detailing more of the plot means giving away its twists, which is really all Argylle has going for it. Despite careful engineering, the double crosses and betrayals are too often predictable – maybe because they are based on genre clichés.

Like director Matthew Vaughn’s Kingsman franchise, Argylle is built around action scenes – slickly choreographed stunts set to a thunderous soundtrack and largely played for laughs. What it does not have is an R rating, which means the violence has been watered down considerably.

The cast includes old and new faces. Bryan Cranston plays the head of an elite espionage agency, Catherine O’Hara is an overprotective mum, and World Wrestling Entertainment champion John Cena is an improbable computer expert.

Sam Rockwell and Bryce Dallas Howard in a still from “Argylle”.

Some old friends from earlier Vaughn films pop up, like Samuel L. Jackson, who plays a self-professed “very cool cat”, and Sofia Boutella as a “keeper of secrets”.

Ariana DeBose, an Oscar winner for West Side Story, has a small part in Argylle’s support team, while Grammy winner Dua Lipa, who made her movie debut in Barbie, is an exceptionally alluring femme fatale here.

Both singers make outstanding contributions to the soundtrack. In fact, the best elements of Argylle may be its jukebox of pounding dance anthems, notably “Electric Energy”.

Dua Lipa (left) and Henry Cavill in a still from “Argylle”.

It has been over 20 years since Vaughn helped usher in an entire generation of action stars in films like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (which he produced) and Layer Cake. By comparison Argylle feels glossy and overblown, and watching it a way to pass time.

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