Showing posts with label muay thai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label muay thai. Show all posts

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Shadow Master (2022) - Movie Trailer

 Check out the trailer for Shadow Master, a martial arts horror film directed by Pearry Reginald Teo and starring D.Y. Sao, Brian Le, Layton Matthews, Anna Harr, and Craig Ng. The Martial Club crew does the choreography for this movie! Here is the synopsis:

 Slain during a ferocious fight and reborn with supernatural powers, one man stands between demonic forces bent on hastening the Apocalypse and a ragtag group of apartment dwellers protecting their children from certain peril.

Shadow Master comes out November 4, 2022 in select theaters and on November 8, 2022 for On Demand and digital services. This movie looks AMAZING, and I really want to see it!


 

Sunday, August 21, 2022

Power Kids (AKA Force Of Five/Five Heart Heroes) (2009) - A Review

 

Power Kids is a children's movie not safe for children.

Power Kids (also known as Five Heart Heroes or Force Of Five) is a Thai action/martial arts/comedy movie released in 2009. It stars Nantawooti Boonrapsap, Sasisa Jindamanee, Paytaaai Wongkamlao, Nawarat Techarathanaprasert, Pimchanok Luevisadpaibul, Johnny Trí Nguyễn, and Darun Tantiwichitwech. Power Kids was directed by Krissanapong Rachata.

From left: Pong, Woot, Jib, and Cat.
 

In Power Kids,Woot (played by Nantawooti Boonrapsap), Cat (played by Sasisa Jindamanee), Pong (played by Paytaaai Wongkamlao) and Woon (played by Darun Tantiwichitwech) are friends who live together at their teacher's Muay Thai school. Woon, Woot's younger brother, has a heart condition which is worsening. After an incident with bullies sends Woon to the hospital, they find out he needs a heart transplant as soon as possible. Luckily (or unluckily, depending on your point of view) there is a donor at another hospital in the city. Things are set up and ready to go when terrorists invade the hospital where the donor is located, locking the whole place down. With the knowledge that the donated heart can only survive four hours after being taken out of the donor, Woot vows to get the heart for his brother. Woot, Cat, Pong, and Jib (played by Nawarat Techarathanaprasert) infiltrate the hospital to retrieve the heart before the four hours are up. Along the way they make unlikely allies and fight off gun-toting terrorists!

These terrorists are not messing around!
 

This is one peculiar movie! Though the tone of this film is of a family friendly type of movie...there are some violent scenes in here! Truthfully, this is one of the most violent kids movies I've ever seen! People are getting shot to death (with blood spraying realistically, at least), people falling to their deaths, people being set on fire; it's just wild! It's funny because the movie starts off like a typical kids movie. You don't expect it to go that far! The first sign that this movie is not safe for kids is when a drunk character enters the Muay Thai school cussing up a storm in English! The kids savagely beat him up, naturally. Actually, at the start of the movie there is a violent shoot out between soldiers, so...that would be the first sign this isn't a regular kids movie!

I actually did not like this movie when I first watched it. I usually don't mind a mixing of genres, but this one was a bit too far. On my second viewing of Power Kids (for this review), I actually liked it a lot! I don't know, I just went with it! The movie is a bit funny, at least (the best comedic scene is when Pong and Jib are in the hospital morgue). Though, there is some comedy based on child abuse... so be prepared. The kids are pretty good actors, especially Woon's actor. You really feel for him and hope everything turns out for the best for him.

Woot and Cat go hard on their opponents!
 

The action in Power Kids is pretty good! It's not Hong Kong style, it is based more on Muay Thai. Woot and Cat throw brutal knees and elbows at the heads and faces of their opponents. Sasisa Jindamanee, who plays Cat, is awesome in this. She can really kick some butt! Nantawooti Boonrapsap, who plays Woot, is great too. In one scene he knees a guy through glass, and he doesn't even cover his face while going through the glass! That kid is hardcore! Johnny Trí Nguyễn, who plays the second in command of the terrorists, is a great fighter. He does take a beating from these little kids, though! As for the other action in this, there is violent gunplay, stabbings, and explosions. It's got everything you would want in an action movie!

So, should you watch Power Kids? I have to say yes. This is a movie you have to see to believe! I would advise that you do not show little children this movie! 3 Ninjas this is not! The story is simple, but serviceable. The action is hard-hitting and surprisingly violent. There is some good comedy in this, and it can get sappy at times, but it's undeniably entertaining. Give it a shot!

The cover of the Blu-Ray I watched for this review. I bought it for $1 at Dollar Tree, can you believe it? A dollar for a martial arts movie? I'm there!

 
The back cover of the Blu-Ray. It even hints that this movie is not for kids!

The Blu-Ray disc itself.

 

 

 

 

Reviewed by David Williams

Thursday, December 30, 2021

Tom-Yum-Goong (AKA The Protector Unedited) (2005) - A Review

 

Tony Jaa ready for action!
 

Tom-Yum-Goong is a Thai martial arts movie released in 2005 starring Tony Jaa, Mum Jokmok, Bongkoj Khongmalai, Xing Jin, Damian De Montemas, and Johnny Tri Nguyen. The movie was directed by Prachya Pinkaew, and fight choreography was done by Tony Jaa and Panna Rittikrai. Tom-Yum-Goong is known as The Protector in the United States in an edited version of the movie.

Tony Jaa plays Kham, the last guard of the royal elephants in Thailand. He grew up around elephants, particularly Por Yai (full grown) and Kohrn (baby elephant), who he considers family. These elephants are stolen at the New Year's festival, and Kham's father is injured in the process. It is Kham's responsibility to protect those elephants, so he goes in search of them.He ends up going to Sydney, Australia in his quest to find them. While there, he joins forces with a fellow Thai cop named Mark (played by Mum Jokmok). Tony Jaa becomes falsely accused of a crime and becomes hunted by the police. In all of this, Chinese triad bosses jockey for leadership, which affects Kham's quest.

Admittedly, the plot of the movie is a bit simplistic. Kham wants his elephants back. A lot of people made fun of this back when it was released in America. I didn't have a problem with the story. It was what Kham was raised and trained to do. I guess in the American edit, the importance of the elephants and Kham's true relationship to them aren't really thoroughly explained. In the original version, we see the townspeople praying for the missing elephants. We are shown why the elephants are so important, and why Kham goes through all the trouble he does to get them back.

Then there is the main villain, played by Xing Jin. She is a trans woman, and the other triad bosses don't take her seriously because of it. It is a bit complicated how she is treated in the movie. The rival triad bosses treat her disrespectfully. To Kham, it doesn't matter. To me, it does not seem like she is portrayed as evil because she is trans; she is evil because she is overly ambitious and greedy. I really hope I am reading that portrayal right. The backstories of villains don't interest me much, but hers' is pretty interesting. I will say, the corrupt cop working with her is a dead ringer for an older Andrew Garfield!

The action is really good in this one! Kham's first fight in the movie has one of the best hero entrances ever! The fight in the subway is awesome; a lot of creative choreography and stunts in that one. Then there is the one-shot fight scene, where Kham goes up a flight of stairs fighting off bad guys. Really cool to see a one-shot fight scene like that, and man that must have been tiring to prepare for, film, and perform in! Kham has awesome fights with a capoeira fighter (Lateef Crowder) and a wu shu fighter (Jon Foo). Probably my favorite fights in the film! There is the fight scene where he destroys dozens of guys' limbs and joints with bone cracking submissions, strikes, and holds. At the end he has to fight a bunch of roided up fighters (with Nathan Jones being the main one). It's a good fight scene, creative and hard-hitting, but the roided up guys are not very mobile.

So, do I recommend Tom-Yum-Goong? Yes I do! As I said before, the plot is a bit simplistic, but the action more than makes up for it. Tony Jaa is a dynamo in this! Plus, if you've ever wanted to see a musclehead fling a young elephant across the room, this is the movie for you! Try to watch the full version of the movie, though. It has a nicer pace, and has more scenes expanding on the plot and motivations of characters. Some characters' fates are changed as well (as compared to the American edited version).

 

I watched the Dragon Dynasty DVD release of this movie!


I really need this movie on Blu-Ray!


Disc 1 is the American cut, called 'The Protector'.


Disc 2 has the original cut of Tom-Yum-Goong.

 

Reviewed by David Williams

The Shadow's Edge (2025) - Movie Trailer

  Here is the trailer for Jackie Chan's latest movie, The Shadow's Edge ! Here is the synopsis (according to Variety):   Set against...