Saturday Night’s Alright For Fighting: Ong-Bak

January 5th, 2008 Posted by Ian W | Action, Martial Arts, Movie Reviews | no comments

When the head of a religious statue, the Ong-Bak of the title, is stolen by a man from Bangkok Ting (Tony Jaa) volunteers to find it and return it to the village. Arriving in the city Ting meets Humlae, a young man who left the village to make his fortune in Bangkok but instead has become a gambler and petty conman. With Humlae’s help Ting tracks down the missing Ong-Bak while along the way he gets caught up in an illegal fighting ring (luckily he’s proficient in Muay Thai) and Humlae finds redemption.

I’d heard a lot about Tony Jaa and his breakthrough film, from Jaa being dubbed the new Bruce Lee to the bone crunching fight scenes. Would the film live up to all the hype? The answer is yes…and no. Jaa is indeed an amazing talent; he combines the gymnastic stunts of Jackie Chan with a brutal fighting style. He’s doesn’t really get much chance to show he can act but he does what’s required - move fast , hit hard and look good.

So what’s wrong with the film? Put simply, the editing sucks. The film features what could have been the greatest chase scene every filmed, what stops it achieving that is the way it’s been edited. Clearly the filmmakers realised they had some amazing stunt work here and decided that if showing a jaw dropping moment once was good, showing it two, and sometimes three, times would be even better. Wrong! What this does is ruin the flow of the fight and pull the viewer out of the film. The chase is the worst example but this attempt to exploit the stunt work is evident in almost all the fight scenes.

The Weekend Western: The Hills Run Red

January 5th, 2008 Posted by Ian W | Movie Reviews, Westerns | no comments

The film starts with a wagon being chased by a contingent of the US Cavalry, onboard the wagon are two men who’ve just pulled off a robbery. Realising they haven’t a hope of both getting away they draw lots to see who will stay in the wagon and draw off the pursuers, and who’ll jump off and escape with the money. Jerry Brewster (Thomas Hunter) stays with the wagon and after being caught does five years in prison during which time he’s tortured but never gives out the name of his partner.

When he’s released his first port of call is the family farm where he expects to find his wife and son. Instead he finds the home abandoned and that his wife has died in poverty with his ex-partner having kept all the money for himself. Adding insult to injury, he’s also taken Brewster’s son. Partnered with a mysterious stranger, played by Dan Duryea, he sets out to find his son and get some payback from “Seagull” the name his one time friend is now living under.