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SAN DIEGO (AP) — Colin Firth is a "gentleman spy" with a killer umbrella and Samuel L. Jackson is a blood-hating villain with a lisp in Fox's forthcoming "Kingsman: The Secret Service."
The two actors were joined by fellow cast members and the film's writer Friday at Comic-Con to present an early look at footage from the October release.
One scene showed Firth taking on half a dozen thugs with nothing but his quick moves and powerful umbrella. His watch also shoots an "amnesia dart" at an observer who would call police. Another showed Jackson's headquarters, where a woman with knives for feet sliced a man in half vertically, then bustled about covering dead bodies so as not to offend her boss's delicate sensibilities.
"I can't stand the sight of blood," he says.
A final clip showed Firth battling assailants in a church, using a Bible as his weapon.
The writer and director behind "Kick-Ass," Jane Goldman and Matthew Vaughn, reunited for this film, billed as a tribute to the old "James Bond" movies.
Mark Millar, who created the comic book the film is based on, called it "a love letter to the spy movies we miss."
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