Life After Fighting
- 2024
- 2h 6min
Un istruttore di arti marziali si trova di fronte alla scomparsa di due suoi studenti, il che lo porta a uno scontro diretto con un gruppo di trafficanti internazionali di bambini.Un istruttore di arti marziali si trova di fronte alla scomparsa di due suoi studenti, il che lo porta a uno scontro diretto con un gruppo di trafficanti internazionali di bambini.Un istruttore di arti marziali si trova di fronte alla scomparsa di due suoi studenti, il che lo porta a uno scontro diretto con un gruppo di trafficanti internazionali di bambini.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBren Foster and his Stunt team are so fast in the fight scenes, it was publicly confirmed No Fight scene was speed up and No CGI used for fight scene. It's all Real.
- Colonne sonoreTHE LAST DANCE
Music written by Richard Tamplenizza
Lyrics written by Bren Foster and Myles Fabien D'arcy Gooden
Performed by Myles Fabien D'arcy Gooden
Recensione in evidenza
Not that long ago i saw the trailer for this movie and remembered the lead actor from a movie i saw with Steven Seagal call Force of Execution about 10 years ago or so. He was very solid in it in term of fighting but for whatever reason, its like he never really did anything more when it comes to Martial Arts? After watching his IMDB resume it seem he spent lots of years in recurring roles in TV shows so that could explain.
Fast forward many years later and this one finally get release, so i give it a rent on Xbox (i couldn't buy it even if i wanted to for whatever reason, rental only) and this really surprised the heck out of me.
I mean the trailer did showed some good fight sequences but with DTV martial arts flick you never know. But i was actually blown away.
The movie has a rather surprisingly long run time for the genre at 2h, but it want to establish the characters well so you feel for them. It still manage to insert enough fight scenes and training scenes in that first and second act that i never felt bored or that it moved too slow.
Once you get in the third act tough is where the show start. BRUTAL fight scenes, fast pace, great choreographies. I read in some other reviews that there was too much "shaky cams" but i think the guy may have had a few beers too much because i didn't notice much shaky cams at all. Yes sometimes the camera follow the action and its not completely steady but its not "shaky" at all.
Story touch on some hard subject and without reinventing anything, it is solid enough to be a base for the action show.
Bren Foster not only star in it, but also directed and written it, so it was really a passion project for him and he succeeded at making a very good modern day Martial Art movie mixing both old school kicks and flips with a more grounded BJJ style of modern MMA.
Other than Scott Adkins its been pretty dry outside of Asia when it comes to this genre. You got Michael Jai White putting one out here and here, but for some reasons he appears often as a guest star in non-martial art movies (i assume he don't want to be type casted) and when he do put one, they not always exactly great. Some are very low budget and it show.
I don't know how big was the budget for Life After Fighting, but even tough there is nothing extremely expensive in it (explosions, car chases or big action set piece), everything they done especially the climax really look great and its very well directed when it comes to the fights.
If i must mention a negative, i would say Bren Foster altough an amazing on screen fighter, lack a bit in term of acting when it comes to emotions, but then again you don't watch a movie like this for academy award type of actings. It was fine enough.
Overall this is one i will like to add to my physical collection so hopefully i can get at least a DVD at some point. And i do hope Mr Foster make more martial arts movie in the futur.
Fast forward many years later and this one finally get release, so i give it a rent on Xbox (i couldn't buy it even if i wanted to for whatever reason, rental only) and this really surprised the heck out of me.
I mean the trailer did showed some good fight sequences but with DTV martial arts flick you never know. But i was actually blown away.
The movie has a rather surprisingly long run time for the genre at 2h, but it want to establish the characters well so you feel for them. It still manage to insert enough fight scenes and training scenes in that first and second act that i never felt bored or that it moved too slow.
Once you get in the third act tough is where the show start. BRUTAL fight scenes, fast pace, great choreographies. I read in some other reviews that there was too much "shaky cams" but i think the guy may have had a few beers too much because i didn't notice much shaky cams at all. Yes sometimes the camera follow the action and its not completely steady but its not "shaky" at all.
Story touch on some hard subject and without reinventing anything, it is solid enough to be a base for the action show.
Bren Foster not only star in it, but also directed and written it, so it was really a passion project for him and he succeeded at making a very good modern day Martial Art movie mixing both old school kicks and flips with a more grounded BJJ style of modern MMA.
Other than Scott Adkins its been pretty dry outside of Asia when it comes to this genre. You got Michael Jai White putting one out here and here, but for some reasons he appears often as a guest star in non-martial art movies (i assume he don't want to be type casted) and when he do put one, they not always exactly great. Some are very low budget and it show.
I don't know how big was the budget for Life After Fighting, but even tough there is nothing extremely expensive in it (explosions, car chases or big action set piece), everything they done especially the climax really look great and its very well directed when it comes to the fights.
If i must mention a negative, i would say Bren Foster altough an amazing on screen fighter, lack a bit in term of acting when it comes to emotions, but then again you don't watch a movie like this for academy award type of actings. It was fine enough.
Overall this is one i will like to add to my physical collection so hopefully i can get at least a DVD at some point. And i do hope Mr Foster make more martial arts movie in the futur.
- destroyerwod
- 8 giu 2024
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 5.686 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 6 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.39:1
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