WT

Kingsman: The Secret Service

2015 · Directed by Matthew Vaughn

🧘8

Woke Score

60

Critic

🍿79

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 52 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #903 of 1469.

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Representation Casting

Score: 15/100

Cast includes Samuel L. Jackson in a major role, but overall representation remains predominantly white and male. No particular effort toward diverse casting.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or representation evident in the film.

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Feminist Agenda

Score: 5/100

Female characters exist but are secondary and underdeveloped. Sophie Cookson's agent is present but marginalized in the narrative.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 0/100

While Samuel L. Jackson appears in the cast, there is no explicit racial consciousness or commentary about race in the film.

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Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

No climate themes, environmental concerns, or ecological commentary present in the narrative.

💰

Eat the Rich

Score: 20/100

Some class commentary exists regarding a working-class protagonist entering an elite institution, but this is played for entertainment rather than genuine systemic critique.

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Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

The film celebrates traditionally fit and attractive spies with no body diversity or body positivity messaging.

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Neurodivergence

Score: 0/100

No neurodivergence representation or themes present in the film.

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Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

While the film references and parodies spy genre conventions, it does not engage in revisionist history of actual historical events.

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Lecture Energy

Score: 10/100

The film is meta and self-aware about its own excess, but it prioritizes entertainment and spectacle over educational messaging or moral instruction.

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Synopsis

The story of a super-secret spy organization that recruits an unrefined but promising street kid into the agency's ultra-competitive training program just as a global threat emerges from a twisted tech genius.

Consciousness Assessment

Kingsman: The Secret Service is a stylish, self-aware action comedy that mistakes irony for insight and excess for commentary. Matthew Vaughn's film operates as a knowing parody of James Bond tropes, complete with exaggerated violence and a protagonist who ascends from the working class into an elite institution. This premise contains the seeds of genuine social observation, yet the film treats class dynamics as mere setup for spectacle rather than substantive critique. The result is a movie that gestures toward being clever about its own retrograde sensibilities while never actually interrogating them.

The cast, while featuring Samuel L. Jackson in a prominent role, remains predominantly white and male. Sophie Cookson's female agent is present but narratively marginal, confirming that Vaughn's interests lie elsewhere. The film's cultural undercurrents run decidedly backward, favoring traditional masculine codes of conduct and gentlemanly violence over any genuine engagement with contemporary social consciousness. There is no LGBTQ+ representation, no racial commentary despite Jackson's presence, no climate concern, and no body diversity worth mentioning. The film is indifferent to these matters, which is perhaps preferable to performative inclusion.

What emerges is a fundamentally pre-2020s entertainment product designed to thrill rather than educate or challenge. Kingsman succeeds at what it sets out to do: deliver action sequences with wit and style. It simply does so without any meaningful engagement with progressive sensibilities or social awareness. The film's subsequent success and franchise expansion suggest that audiences were perfectly content with this arrangement.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

60%from 50 reviews
The Playlist91

Vaughn and his collaborators have taken a crude and disposable property and turned it into something more – a thoughtful, exciting, whip-smart spy adventure that doesn't let its smart-ass post-modernism overwhelm its playfulness or its heart.

Drew TaylorRead Full Review →
Hitfix91

This is a case of all the elements lining up and pushing a potentially good film into the great category because of just how well executed it is.

Drew McWeenyRead Full Review →
Village Voice90

Those more devoted to the genre can debate whether Matthew Vaughn's Kingsman is the best comic-book movie of the last few years. What's beyond argument, however, is that Vaughn has whipped up the most interesting one, the only to make ferocious, unsettling art out of the great contradiction of superheroic fantasy: jolly do-goodism and its brutalizing sadism.

Alan ScherstuhlRead Full Review →
The Telegraph20

The more calculated Vaughn’s films are to appeal to his surprisingly rabid fan-base, the more they seem custom-built to repel everyone else.