

This time out, Oscar winner Julianne Moore essays the world-threatening villain duties that a lisping, garishly wardrobed Samuel L. Alas, nothing that follows musters quite the same verve. Gleefully violent and cheerfully gobbing profanities at every sharp left turn, it traced the rocket-fuelled trajectory of chav hero Eggsy (Taron Egerton), plucked from the mean streets of north-west London by gentleman spy Harry Hart (Colin Firth) and inducted into the titular society of secret agents.Ī pedal-to-metal joy ride, Kingsman: The Secret Service scored $414m worldwide, meaning this sequel, Kingsman: The Golden Circle, was inevitable… and is no doubt the first of many.īut how do you recapture the surprise thrill of that first hit? Well, judging from the eye-saucering, jaw-plummeting opening scene, with ease: held at gunpoint in a speeding black cab, a tuxedoed Eggsy sets about his escape, first engaging in a ferocious backseat brawl that somehow spills onto the roof of the car, and then by seeing off a fleet of chasing vehicles peopled by goons poking out of sunroofs to spray lead from machine-guns.Īudaciously choreographed, seamlessly CGI-augmented and riddled with as many humorous beats as bullets, this screeching set-piece almost – almost – matches the infamous church massacre and exploding heads climax of the first movie. With the Kingsman franchise's usual dose of stylized action and comedy, The King's Man will look to reinvigorate interest in the franchise's future after the subdued response to Kingsman: The Golden Circle.Back in 2014, Matthew Vaughn's Kingsman: The Secret Service, an independently financed $80m production based on a comic book by Mark Millar, scripted by Jane Goldman and distributed by 20th Century Fox, crashed into cinemas like James Bond's noisome nephew. The trailer has added more context to the story and showed off the excellent ensemble it will feature, whether that includes Djimon Hounsou and Gemma Arterton as people involved with Kingsman or Daniel Brühl and Rhys Ifans's Rasputin as the villains they'll go up against. Now that this new trailer for The King's Man has arrived, fans have received what is arguably the best look at the film so far. So, not only is Britain at war like many other countries at this time, but the Kingsman appear to be engaged in a war of their own.

The trailer paints a war between the first generation of Kingsman and a group of villains led by someone with a shepherd's crook emblem on their ring. The song choice also works with the plot of the film in another way. Using "War" in this new trailer further emphasizes the WWI setting of the prequel, especially as it plays over footage of the Duke of Oxford (Ralph Fiennes) and more fighting on the battlefield. The song was originally written as an anti-Vietnam War ballad that questions what good comes from war (and answers, " absolutely nothing"). The selection of "War" as the song for The King's Man trailer is quite fitting. However, the trailer for The King's Man doesn't use either of these versions, as a rock cover recorded by Black Stone Cherry in 2016 is what can be heard playing. The song featured in The King's Man's new trailer is "War." The song originally was recorded by The Temptations in 1970 but the version done by Edwin Starr is the more well-known rendition. With the release of a new trailer for The King's Man, viewers might recognize the franchise theme composed by Henry Jackman and Matthew Margeson, but there is also another recognizable beat featured throughout. Related: What Year Is The King's Man Set In? The King's Man is going all the way back to World War I to tell this new tale, and the song choice for the latest trailer reflects the state of the world at that time.

Over half a year after that trailer, the marketing is starting to pick back up to get fans of the Kingsman franchise excited for another entry before The King's Man arrives in theaters this September.

Disney debuted a second trailer for the film in late 2019 but then delayed the film's release to the fall of 2020. Its been months since any sort of promotional materials for The King's Man have been released, as the marketing campaign slowed down at the end of 2019.
