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Τρίτη 8 Μαρτίου 2011

JONNY ENGLISH

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Johnny English is a 2003 British comedy film parodying the James Bond secret agent genre. It stars Rowan Atkinson (who, two decades earlier, appeared in an unofficial James Bond film - Never Say Never Again) as the incompetent titular Britishspy, with John MalkovichNatalie ImbrugliaTim Pigott-Smith and Ben Miller in supporting roles. The screenplay was written by Bond writers Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, with William Davies, and the film was directed by Peter Howitt. The film was known by its tagline, He knows no fear, he knows no danger, he knows nothing. The movie grossed a total of $160 million worldwide.[1] A sequel is currently under production for a release in 2011.


The character of Johnny English himself is based on a similar character called Richard Latham who was played by Atkinson in a series of British television advertisements for Barclaycard. The character of Bough (pronounced 'Boff') was retained from the advertisements though another actor, Henry Naylor, played the part in the ads. Some of the gags from the advertisements made it into the film, including English incorrectly identifying a waiter, and the ballpoint pen scene (Latham inadvertently 'shot' himself with a tranquilizer dart which fired from the gadget pen when he attempted to use it during a demonstration to a class of spy recruits, saying as he collapsed "take over for a Bougher, will you moment?" before being taken to hospital).[edit]

[edit]Plot

An explosion at the funeral of Agent One, Britain's top agent, wipes out every secret agent in the country—except one who was overlooking the cars entering. When a plot to steal the Crown Jewels is revealed which the dead agent was working on, Johnny English, an inept worker at British Intelligence (whose bungling was partially responsible not only for the agents' death, but for the death of Agent One himself, after giving Agent One incorrect information about his mission he died as 'submarine hatch failed to open') is summoned as a last resort. Together with his (far more capable) assistant Angus Bough (Ben Miller), he manages to discover the person behind the plot, the French prison entrepreneur Pascal Sauvage (John Malkovich), whose family once had a claim to the throne.
Sauvage – a descendant of William the Conqueror – believes that the crown should have gone to him instead of the Queen, and has hatched an evil plan to steal the Crown Jewels, have an impostor replace the Archbishop of Canterbury (Oliver Ford Davies), and have him proclaim Sauvage as King. Meanwhile, English is strangely attracted to a mysterious woman, Lorna Campbell (Natalie Imbruglia), whom he meets at a big social event whilst guarding the centrepiece to the whole event—the Crown Jewels. He inevitably fails, and the Jewels are stolen. He knocks out a Beefeater, pretends to fight a criminal in another room, and later makes up a description for the authorities. Later he and Bough follow a tunnel and find the Jewels, but fail to stop the thieves, with English instead following a car to a funeral, where he has to pretend to be an asylum inmate to get out of it.
Meanwhile, English reports his suspicions to the head of MI7 named Pegasus (Tim Pigott-Smith), who naturally doesn't believe him. English and Bough infiltrate Sauvage's headquarters, behind the knowledge of the agency, via parachute. English initially lands on the wrong building, abseiling the nearby and identical London Hospital and, after a phenomenal error of judgment resulting in his holding several doctors and patients at gunpoint, English enters the headquarters through a back door. Both agents activate a DVD player, exposing Sauvage's sinister scheme. English, after accidentally injecting himself with muscle relaxant, meets Lorna again, who turns out to be an Interpol agent herself, also on Sauvage's tail. Along with Bough, they gatecrash a party held by Sauvage, and Bough and English are promptly dismissed by their superiors (partly because of one of the henchmen reporting English's antics to Sauvage, still a friend of English's unwitting boss, and partially because the muscle relaxant's effects had not worn off completely, making English seem somewhat inebriated).
Sauvage concludes that English knows too much and has his henchmen enter Sandringham House and force the Queen to sign a letter of abdication renouncing her family's claim to the British throne. The Queen, at first, refuses to sign even at gunpoint, but when the threat is turned to one of her Welsh Corgis, she obeys, thus leaving the post free for Sauvage. Sauvage is informed by British officials the day after that, as the closest surviving relative of the Queen, the position of monarch now belongs to him.
English returns to his flat in regret for himself. However, Lorna pays him a visit, saying that the mission which he was dismissed from was reassigned to her, and she persuades English to join her. They both travel to France and infiltrate Sauvage's chateau and overhear his proposal of turning the United Kingdom into a giant prison once he is king. However, in a room where they are spying on Sauvage, English accidentally triggers a microphone, which causes Sauvage to hear their tactics and promptly call on guards to seize them. They decide to take the DVD, but because of English dropping it on a tray full of identical unlabeled disks, take the wrong one—a surveillance video of English dancing to ABBA in his bathroom. They are held hostage by Sauvage, but are freed by Bough and return to England on the day of his coronation.
At Sauvage's coronation, English sneaks in with Lorna, emerges from his disguise as the English bishop in front of Sauvage and publicly accuses him of treason. Unaware that the fake Archbishop is no longer in use, English attempts to verify his claim by pulling at the Archbishop's face, believing it to be a mask. This fails predictably. Undeterred, he tries to expose the 'fake' Archbishop a second time. Whilst infiltrating Sauvage's headquarters earlier on in the film, when Sauvage's first plan was still in action, English spotted a tattoo on the lower back of the original wearer of the Archbishop mask: ' Jesus is coming... look busy '. English grabs the Archbishop, turns him round and, in front of everyone at Westminster Abbey and millions of viewers worldwide, bares the Archbishop's tattoo-free arse. Upon realizing that there is no tattoo there himself, English resorts to a final, last-ditch attempt.
He radios to Bough to tell him to play the DVD they retrieved. Bough has the people running the event at gunpoint, and makes them play the DVD on the massive television screen in the Abbey, an act which results in three-quarters of the world's population watching English, in a shower cap and underpants, dancing and miming along to 'Does Your Mother Know', by ABBA. English is subsequently taken away, but breaks free from Sauvage's cronies once again and, swinging from a wire above Sauvage and the Archbishop, grabs the crown before it touches Sauvage's head. While he is trying to prevent the Archbishop from crowning Sauvage king, he falls onto the throne, knocking Sauvage onto the floor, and is inadvertently crowned himself; he then places Sauvage under arrest, reveals the schemes to the public, and allows in the Queen to happily return to the throne. In return, she gives him a knighthood.
The film ends with a romantic drive up a mountain. At the top, Johnny and Lorna start to get romantic but Johnny accidentally presses the eject button in his car and Lorna shoots into the sky, whilst still strapped to her seat, eventually landing into a swimming pool. "Oh Fuck" says Johnny and the credits roll. During the end credits of the film, Lorna lands in a swimming pool, which has Bough and a false assailant (whose appearance Johnny gave to a Data Support officer whilst covering for his own mistake of knocking out the head of Royal Security in the Tower of London) at its side.
source;wikipedia