“I thought, ‘You know what? Let’s do a prequel.’ That’s where it began. I think the modern ones can be more fun and Gonzo and we just do some stuff that people aren’t expecting, and the other side will be more serious, but not boring. And that’s the thing that I think we’ve forgotten is these old epic films.It’s possible The King’s Man 2 could happen and here’s everything we know about the potential sequel. Based upon Mark Millar’s graphic novel The Secret Service, Kingsman: The Secret Service first arrived in 2015, with the spy action comedy becoming a major hit. The movie’s success would led to its 2017 sequel Kingsman: The Golden Circle, while The King’s Man serves as a prequel for the franchise.
I love silence I think you can convey more in silence than you can with dialogue - not all the time, but in certain cases and certain stories. There was this movie that came out with Robert Redford called All Is Lost, where his boat gets stranded. He has maybe three lines in the whole film, and I thought that was great. It was such a wonderful and just staggering performance. You can give a lot away with silence. And I enjoyed it; I embraced it. Because you can convey a lot with your body, your behavior, and your eyes. You touch on those emotions, and the audience can read them. The audience isn’t stupid. They’re smart, and they get it.
The series first invoked Lewis Carroll’s elusive bunny in the first movie, the 1999 genre game changer that was jointly directed by the Wachowski siblings and soon set audiences’ heads on fire. “Follow the white rabbit” Neo, a.k.a. the One (Keanu Reeves, cinema’s ideal savior), reads on his desktop monitor, shortly before doing just that. The chase continued and at times seemed never-ending as it endured through two sequels, comics and video games. It also provided grist for reams of articles, dissertations and scholarly books (“The Matrix and Philosophy: Welcome to the Desert of the Real”), taking its place as one of contemporary pop culture’s supreme interpretive chew toys.At one of those clubs, Stan meets a cold-blooded psychiatrist, Lilith (Cate Blanchett), who is unburdened by professional scruples about confidentiality. With her help, his ambitions balloon again — but the bubble is overdue to burst.