Coventry Telegraph

SPIES IN DISGUISE

- Saoirse Ronan and Timothee Chalamet Lance Sterling (voiced by Will Smith)

(PG)

★★★★★

A DEBONAIR James Bond-esque secret agent goes deep underfeath­er to outwit his nefarious nemesis in the madcap computer-animated comedy Spies In Disguise.

Co-directed by Troy Quane and Nick Bruno, both making their feature debuts, this hi-tech body-swap caper gleefully subverts the 007 playbook by proposing non-violent, compassion­ate methods to neutralise terrorists and minimise the potential for collateral damage.

As a young boy, Walter Beckett (voiced by Tom Holland) appropriat­es circuitry from electronic devices to fashion wacky inventions for his police officer mother.

Single parent Wendy (Rachel Brosnahan) encourages her boy to think outside of the box as her crime-fighting sidekick.

Alas, Wendy is killed in the line of duty and orphan Walter finds his calling as a gadget geek at a US government­funded spy agency overseen by Joy Jenkins (Reba McEntire).

Tuxedo-clad operative Lance Sterling (Will Smith) relies on the agency's ingenious gizmos to carry out his daredevil missions.

Unfortunat­ely, boohiss bionic criminal Killian (Ben Mendelsohn) outwits Lance and the spy is wrongly accused of treason.

Lance becomes a fugitive and inadverten­tly drinks Walter's experiment­al biodynamic­s concealmen­t potion, which morphs the suave agent into a pigeon.

A “rat with wings” might be the perfect disguise to sneak up on Killian.

Walter becomes Lance's wing man on a globe-trotting odyssey with feisty internal affairs agent Marcy Keppel (Rashida Jones) in hot pursuit, flanked by her own technology gurus: Ears (DJ Khaled) and Eyes (Karen Gillan). Spies In Disguise is a slick mismatched buddy comedy. The script proudly promotes Walter's individual­ity as a badge of honour and indulges in heavy-handed emotional manipulati­on to resolve the young man's deep-rooted feelings of loss.

Scriptwrit­ers Brad Copeland and Lloyd Taylor trade predominan­tly in family-friendly sweetness even when they resort to toilet humour to explain the multi-functional wonders of a pigeon's cloaca. An anatomy lesson that's not just for the birds.

 ??  ?? Saoirse Ronan as Jo, Eliza Scanlen as Beth, Florence Pugh as Amy, Laura Dern as Marmee and Emma Watson as Meg
Saoirse Ronan as Jo, Eliza Scanlen as Beth, Florence Pugh as Amy, Laura Dern as Marmee and Emma Watson as Meg
 ??  ?? Walter and Lance, as a pigeon
Walter and Lance, as a pigeon
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