The secret service can now rely on only one man -- Johnny English. Currently teaching at a minor prep school, Johnny springs back into action to find the mysterious hacker.
However, contrary to the existing oddities and the inexplicable logic, he always in an unimaginable way achieves positive results and achieves the intended goals without using outside help or unnecessary advice of other specialists. Having completed with success another, very difficult and confused mission, exhausted by endless problems, Johnny intends to go on vacation in order to relax a little and restore the undermined strength. In fact, a slow and awkward man pursues secret goals.
He hopes that during his absence, the royal family will adequately appreciate his many years of service to the state, and will not liquidate the organization, of which he is the only employee.
And the whole film is very, very daft, and I can't count the number of scenes that I deem as extremely silly. I do think the Coronation Scene is hilarious though. There are some nice locations, some good effects, and a number of funny scenes.
The acting is not Oscar-worthy, but everyone seems to be enjoying themselves. Natalie Imbruglia looks gorgeous, and does do well. Tim Piggott-Smith and Oliver Ford-Davies have little to do, but they do shine in the few scenes they are in. John Malkovich hams it up to a tee as the villain of the piece Pascal Sauvage, but holding the film together is Rowan Atkinson in a rather unsophisticated but fun role of Johnny English, and he breathes life into a film that could have been embarrassing and forgettable, but his sheer entertainment value makes it worth seeing.
All in all, unassuming and definitely not Oscar worthy but not a bad film by all means. Bean escapades that never translated properly to the cinema. This one is essentially a Bond spoof with Atkinson playing an incompetent Bean-style super spy who has to save the Earth from a criminal mastermind with a ridiculous plot.
Where to begin? There are a few good gags here amid a generally obvious storyline with lots of weak and groanworthy moments that should never have been included. Atkinson's okay, but Natalie Imbruglia is no actress and John Malkovich hams it up horribly as the villain of the hour. Ordinarily, what accumulates a giggle isn't simply the joke yet Atkinson's ensuing response to his blunder.
Genuinely at an opportune time, there's an anticipated minute when English unintentionally shoots his supervisor's secretary with a sedative pen, yet it's interesting to see him endeavor to conceal her unmistakable head by jumping along as his manager moves over the room.
Also, it's interesting to see a gathering of crisis restorative staff seem later as English's better has his back turned than their essence. This is the standard push of the film's diversion.
In the long run, the jokes themselves get old, and not even Atkinson can keep the vitality up. Later on there's an expanded stifler that focuses on a mystery access to Sauvage's house through the assistance's can, and it's more appalling than interesting.
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