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5 Secrets To Spy’s Success

The fun and hilarious Spy took the weekend box office, and other comedies looking to do the same should take heed of what it gets right.

4) Work Within Your Means

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A $65 million budget is huge for a comedy, but it’s a pittance for a comedy that’s trying to mimic the globetrotting story beats and expensive setpieces of a spycraft thriller. To put it in perspective: $65 million buys you a Goldeneye in 1995, and only one third of a Skyfall in 2012. Inevitably, the concessions Spy has to make to work within this milieu make themselves known. There’s a not-terribly-convincing CG jet that the film has to cut to during an otherwise impressive mid-flight action sequence, and the final helicopter chase looks laughably fake (though that’s not necessarily a negative -more on that in a bit).

Where Spy makes smart, frugal decisions is in how Feig chooses to shoot many of the smaller action scenes. Fistfights focus on the actors pulling off flashy, joke-laced singular takedowns, which helps hide the limited number of extras and small shooting spaces. Spy’s R rating entitles it to be not just as foul, but also as violent as it desires, which can make for a blessing or a crutch. While truly orgiastic volumes of blood and gore have their comic appeal, splatter effects are used sparingly here.

Again, Feig chooses to emphasize smaller, detail-packed highlights instead of trying to draw a digital bloodbath. What you get on screen is the core essence of spy movie action, just with very little of the excess. Plus, being a comedy means Spy can have fun by explicitly playing up how un-glamorous its version of this kind of blockbuster is. Which leads us to maybe the most important takeaway…

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