Showing posts with label cary-hiroyuki tagawa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cary-hiroyuki tagawa. Show all posts

Friday, 5 September 2025

Kickboxer 2: The Road Back (1991)

There's something about looking to the past and spending time with some simple pleasures. Whether that's reading a good book without any gadgets distracting you, wallowing in the nostalgic glow of some past TV show you can now find on a variety of streaming services, or sitting down to watch the kind of film that used to make some money by heading "straight to video" for eager and undemanding action movie fans. That's why I ended up watching Kickboxer 2: The Road Back recently.

Sasha Mitchell is the leading man this time around. He plays David Sloan, the brother of Kurt and Eric Sloane (characters in the first Kickboxer movie). And, who could've thunk it, David ends up being challenged to a fight by the menacing and dangerous Tong Po (Michel Qissi returning to the role). That's everything you need to know about this martial arts movie that tries to do nothing more than provide a few more fights for those who enjoyed the first movie.

Albert Pyun directs the whole thing competently enough, and this actually feels like a film that gives him a bit more to work with than he would have throughout many other films in his career. The focus is on the fighting, and it's helped by bringing back characters that we're already familiar with, in the shape of Tong Po and the Miyagi-like Xian Chow (Dennis Chan, also returning to the series). David S. Goyer may have gone on to bigger and better things, but he does well here with what's required. It's cheesy, our hero has an unwavering moral compass, and the fights are nicely spread out throughout the 90-minute runtime.

Mitchell is a bit of a bland lead, but he just about looks capable enough when displaying some fighting skills. It's ridiculous to think of any scenario in which he would be able to beat Qissi though, who remains an entertainingly formidable villain, but the film simply gets viewers onside early enough to keep us rooting for the good guy to win. Vince Murdocco plays another fighter, who you just know is going to receive a major beating at some point, but the rest of your enjoyment comes from watching Chan, the superb Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, the equally-superb Peter Boyle, and a small, but worthwhile, turn from John Diehl. Matthias Hues is a second-tier opponent, and Heather McComb has the thankless task of being the only main female character, obviously required to look on as our hero battles with his conscience and trauma on the way to a grudge match.

Not as good as the first film in the series, as expected, and not as interesting or stylish as many other action movies you could choose to watch, but this was more fun than I expected, perhaps because it felt like the shelf-fillers we have lost in the tsunami of constant content that is all just available at the touch of a button. I'm not going to recommend this to people, but I will say that I am much more likely to rewatch this ahead of many big titles that have appeared exclusively online. 

6/10

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Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Tekken (2011)

There are Street Fighter fans, there are Mortal Kombat fans, there are probably still some Virtua Fighter fans and there are Tekken fans. When I was growing up I mastered Mortal Kombat. I loved it, there were some great characters, I'd enabled the D,U,L,L,A,R,D cheat to get the blood and gore switched on and I'd mastered all of the fatalities. The fancy button combinations required for the Street Fighter games had never been to my liking. Then, during those exciting Playstations years, I discovered Tekken 2. A perfect combination, it had all the fun of Mortal Kombat and a similiar, but slightly easier, button-combo system to Street Fighter.

With so many great characters and so many different fighting styles, a movie should have been easy to get right. Well, this is here to prove us all wrong.

Tekken isn't awful - it's slick and polished and at least keeps things lively enough throughout - but it's just lacking in almost every way. The characters aren't as memorable as they should be, the fights aren't very exciting (any featuring the main character tend to follow the same pattern - he gets a beating, remembers a lesson from his mother and then is able to turn the tables and win) and it's not even as pleasing as the movie versions of Mortal Kombat (hey, I liked it) or Street Fighter (which some fans enjoyed).

Jon Foo plays the main character, Jin, who enters a fighting competition as a way to embarrass the Tekken Corporation and strike a mighty blow for the common people. He has no personality, or charisma, but viewers are stuck with him. Thankfully, Kelly Overton plays Christie Monteiro and looks lovely doing so, even if the camera shows the crack of her backside too many times, while Candice Hillebrand and Marian Zapico play the gorgeous Nina and Anna Williams, respectively. Luke Goss turns up as Steve Fox, the man who opts to guide Jin through the tournament, and Gary Daniels looks the part as big bad Bryan Fury. The main villain of the piece is Kazuya Mishima (Ian Anthony Dale), son of Heihachi Mishima (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa) and the man who becomes obsessed with destroying Jin at all costs.

Director Dwight H. Little, working from a screenplay by Alan B. McElroy, just fumbles what should have been an easy piece of lowbrow entertainment. Limited screen-time for the likes of Yoshimitsu and Eddy Gordo (Lateef Crowder) give a small taste of how good this could have been, with the RIGHT characters all given screen-time and one or two special moves given their due.

As it is, undemanding viewers will be able to stick this on and enjoy some fun with a couple of beers and some unhealthy snacks. It's that kind of movie, not that there's anything wrong with that (TM - Seinfeld). It just could have been that kind of movie while also being much more enjoyable. A missed opportunity.

4/10

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tekken-Blu-ray/dp/B002VD5RZW/ref=sr_1_3?s=dvd&ie=UTF8&qid=1357945141&sr=1-3