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Agneepath (1990)
10/10
A powerhouse of intensity from the great Amitabh Bachchan
27 October 2010
Amitabh Bachchan has always been highly respected and critically praised actor in the Indian film industry. Ever since his breakthrough in Prakash Mehra's Zanjeer (1973), Amitabh had become a personified leading man (prior to which he was mainly a strong supporting-actor with films like Saat Hindustani and Anand, for which he had won awards for his performances). But it was his charismatic turn in Zanjeer that established Bachchan as the Angry Young Man of Bollywood cinema - following up with the blockbusters Deewar, Trishul, Kaalia, Laawaris, Shakti throughout the 1970s and 80s.

The late 1980s were not so smooth in terms of career, with average fairers like Toofan and the box-office failures Ganga Jamuna Saraswati (1988), Main Azaad Hoon and Jaadugar in 1989, Bachchan needed a comeback.

Prolific Hindi filmmaker Mukul Anand had cast Amitabh in Agneepath - which was released in 1990 to critical and commercial success. The film sees a young boy named Vjay (child actor Master Manjunath), living a simple, peaceful life in the village Mandwa. His father Master Dinanath (Alok Nath) is an honest and truthful school teacher, who has always taught his son that the path for honesty is a tough and challenging route; a path of fire (literal translation of the film title), but whoever does travel the Path of Fire, no challenge would be an obstacle for that person. Master Dinanath is highly respected and much loved in Mandwa, as he intends to improve conditions of the village step-by-step. But not everyone wants to follow the wiseman's path to prosperity - Local Landlord Dinkar Rao (Goga Kapoor), sees an opportunity to make it rich by selling the village Kancha Cheena (Danny Denzongpa) - a rich, ambitious and ruthless drug-lord. Who wants to make the village a port for narcotics,since it does not appear on the Indian map and is only a stones-throw away from Bombay City (now Mumbai). The only way they could succeed is by ridding the village of Master Dinanath, after being framed for adultery, Master Dinanath is mercilessly beaten to death by the villagers, and his son Vijay is left as the sole breadwinner for his mother and younger sister.

Upon leaving Mandwa for Bombay - the young Vijay swears to give the village back to his mother. Once entering Bombay, Vijay and his family endure poverty, from sleeping on the streets, becoming a shoeshine and also witnessing his mother being taken advantage of. After retaliating against local goons by burning a petrol pump, his reputation as a hardknock is established and he is taken under by 4 rival gangsters of Kancha Cheena. Vijay grows up to be a key figure of Bombay's underworld (now played by Amitabh Bachchan), but also known as Vijay 'Bhai' (meaning 'Don' or literally 'Brother' Vijay) by the poor for his good deeds and charity. Once surviving an encounter with death from his 4 bosses, Vijay exacts his revenge one-by-one and also getting closer to drug-lord Kancha Cheena. He befriends a street vendor Krishnan Iyer MA (Mithun Chakraborthy), who then is given the job to protect his younger sister Siksha (Neelam), and the two become romantically involved. As he delves deeper into the life of crime, Vijay takes the opportunity exact revenge against Kancha and the people responsible for his fathers' death.

Many comparisons have been made with Agneepath and Brian De Palma's Scarface (1983), saying Agneepath is a remake of De Palma's crime epic. But this is absolutely not the case. As some scenes do resemble hints of Scarface (i.e. Vijay killing 2 of his bosses in a Police station lock-up, the meeting between Vijay and Kancha) even the use of Grigio Moroders' score (in the re-dubbed version with Amitabh's regular voice), other than that the film itself is a completely different story. If anything the film draws similarities to Amitabh's own classic Deewar from 1975, about the rise and fall of a rags-to-riches gangster. The film itself was inspired by the life of Indian gangster Manya Surve; who was shot to death by a police encounter in 1982. Amitabh used many of the late gangsters' mannerisms, the way he sits and even his voice (in the original version of the film). Plot-wise the film is familiar territory for Amitabh, but what excels it above many Indian crime thrillers of that era is the outstanding performances from Amitabh - whose eyes just express the emotions and thoughts of the character and villain Danny - a very hard negative performance to top.

The film is well-directed as is the cinematography, the violence is not glamorised but rather shown in realistic context which can be gruesome and gritty as well. The best cinematography in the whole film is during the film's finale - where Vijay runs through fire and faces his nemesis. The music used throughout a lot of the film and the finale is from French composer Jean Michel-Jarre's 'Second Rendezvous' and 'Third Rendezvous' albums, as well as Hans Zimmers' score to 'Black Rain' (1988). The performances of the main players as well as strong supporting cast make this an unmissable piece of Hindi cinema. As it was the first Hindi film which saw gangsters wearing Ray Ban sunglasses, driving Bentley's and living in exotic locations. Dialogue by Kader Khan is also a driving force as many quotable lines are mentioned in this film.

Overall the film is a brilliant attempt as performances, dialogue and cinematography make it a great example of Bollywood's best actor at his finest.
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4/10
Kickboxer: The High School Musical Edition
20 March 2008
Well what do we have here? A latent homo-erotic MMA film about pretty boys who love to fight. If you people by that, whats next? A hard-boiled crime thriller starring Zach Effron??? Being a student of martial arts for 10 years of my life and a fan of martial arts cinema for most of my life, it baffles me when people say how 'realistic' the fights were. If you mean glamorised by loud rock/rap music playing, slo-mo and sped up action at the same time, and quick editing to hide the inability of the stars... i guess you don't know much about martial arts movies.

The story is of some pre-puberscent high school kid who moves to Florida with his family and falls for the school hottie. But a metro-sexual bully feels threatened by his presence, so he offers a challenge in a MMA fight. He loses, you know the rest, he joins a school, bonds with his sensei, kisses/sleeps with the girl/wins a few fights and ends up victorious in the end.

If you've watched the 80's movies 'The Karate Kid', 'Kickboxer' and 'Bloodsport' (which are a lot more better) you know what this film is about. The fight choreography is possibly the worst I have seen in years, none of the lead actors possess the ability to kick ass with style as you would expect. It's kind of hard to believe such trash was released at the cinemas, it deserves to be straight to video schlock.

If you seek a decent underground fight movie of recent years, watch 'Fatal Contact' (2006), the fight scenes are better and much more convincing.
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8/10
Rags to riches... but is it all that it's made out to be??
25 December 2007
This 1970's Shaw Brothers studio epic from legendary director Chang Cheh still seems to be as increasingly watchable to this day.

Chen Kuan Tai stars as Ma Yong Zhen, a street urchin in 1930's Shanghai who gets by washing carriages for the upper-class. But he desires more, he wants to have his own power, wealth and status in the city of Shanghai. After a couple of errands with the Four Dragon's gang, Ma gets the recognition he yearns for and is seen as a saviour to the poor and begins his parade by taking over districts in Shanghai. Soon the power and status he has craved for begins to crumble the inner-happiness he has longed for.

The film has proved to be very influential to this day, as John Woo was assistant director and the Four Dragon's gang was also used in Stephen Chow's 'Kung Fu Hustle' (but known as the Axe Gang), the finale of Ryo Seung Wan's 'City of Violence' also bears resemblance to the finale of 'Ma Yong Zhen'. Chen proves to be a worthy lead as his appearance and performance comes as very empathetic and proves quite adequately in fight sequences. Chang Cheh regular David Chiang plays a small role but sadly shows very little martial arts skills. The fights are somewhat average, if not very bloody but the story line, the central performances, the cinematography and the music score make this film stand out as an evergreen classic. What drew me into this film was it's cool and slick opening sequence (kind of like Chang Cheh's 'Vengeance') it creates the atmosphere of mystery, danger, rage and excitement.

All I can say is if you can see a worthy version of this movie (sadly there's no DVD released in the UK yet) go and see it. But I'm sure other DVD distributors in other countries have released the full uncut version of this classic.
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The Departed (2006)
5/10
Great opening, slow middle and a poor ending
29 August 2007
After watching 'Infernal Affairs' I thought to myself 'Why are the Americans making a remake of such a gem?' There was no need. (especially after many TERRIBLE US remakes of Eastern movies) Then I heard that Martin Scorsese was at the helm. I thought 'there is hope'. When it comes down to the crunch, it's the weakest crime drama from Marty (compared to GoodFellas, Casino and even his breakthrough Mean Streets), as well as being heavily inferior to the neatly-written, slick Hong Kong original.

When going to see this with a few of my buddies, I was expecting a great film from all the reviews it had received. It had started out great, the use of home footage of Boston riots and great dialogue from legend Jack Nicholson. I thought: maybe this is different from the Hong Kong movie, with excellent use of the song 'Gimme Shelter' by The Rolling Stones. Nicholson plays Frank Costello (the ONLY real life character) an Irish mob boss who takes a young Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon) under his wing. Years on Sullivan has become a Sgt in the Boston Police and an inside man for Costello. At the same time William Costigan (Di Caprio) enrolled in the State Police, since he's the nephew of a well-known gangster Jackie Costigan (who's already dead at the beginning) Senior Sgt Dignam (Wahlberg) and Captain Oliver Queenan (Martin Sheen) allow him to be a cop only if he were to be an undercover and infiltrate Costello's racket as a mole.

Over the year, or 2, Sullivan has worked up the ranks of the police and remains the inside man for Costello. But Costigan has endured a violent streak and mind games from Costello who questions his loyalty over numerous occasions. After a botched deal with Chinese mobsters on both sides of the badge, the moles are aware of each other's presence and must find out who is the 'rat' before they are caught.

When it comes to acting and the cast, it was terrific. Damon, Nicholson, Wahlberg and Di Caprio work their magic really well under Scorsese's astute direction. There is good support from Alec Baldwin as a foul-mouthed Police Captain, yet Martin Sheen and Ray Winstone are badly underused and their characters do not show the best of their abilities. The film begins on a different, gritty note from the original, but halfway through becomes an over-violent, quickly chopped rehash of Lau and Mak's masterpiece (like the writers just thought of something quick), which makes the screenplay seemed hacked up. The original trilogy did a great job of telling the story in 3 parts, exploring philosophical aspects as well as providing a backdrop for characters with a prequel. The Departed crams the Infernal Affairs Trilogy into one nearly-3-hours movie and becomes quite flabby and just tries too hard to be a cool crime thriller than the original.

Scorsese may have won the Oscar, but it's only after being snubbed over many occasions (makes me wonder WHY he never won for 'Raging Bull'), the Academy owed him an Award for his previous work which is a distinct piece of cinema history, so they had no choice but to Award 'The Departed'.

It is a reasonably fare crime thriller but not a classic. Check out the original.
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Rush Hour 3 (2007)
7/10
The Weakest Installment of the 3, but still a mindless and enjoyable film
20 August 2007
When we saw the trailers for 'Rush Hour 3', what did we expect? A life-changing epic? No. An intelligently made masterpiece? Definitely not. A mindless action comedy? Yes, thats what 'Rush Hour 3' is.

When Ambassador Han (Tzi Ma) is fallen victim to an assassination attempt, Chief Inspector Lee of the HK Police (Chan) teams up with loud, arrogant and somewhat annoying LAPD Detective James Carter (Tucker) to investigate the matter. Their investigation leads them to the city of love: Paris. They continue their search for Kenji (Hiroyuki Sanada) and the Triads but are violated (and probed) by a French inspector (a cameo by director Roman Polanski) and bump into a local cabbie named George (Yvan Attal) who hates Americans and rescue sexy cabaret singer Genevieve (supermodel Noemi Lenoir), who leads them closer to the Triads.

Simply put, the plot for this movie (just like the first two) is not rocket science. Which is what makes this film enjoyable. There are some moments which let out a chuckle like Roman Polanski's cameo and Chan and Tucker interrogating a French Triad with the use of a nun and their encounter with a Chinese giant at a kung fu school. But a lot of the jokes are just rehashes of jokes from 1 and 2, so they are rather predictable. The action sequences are toned down from what the second instalment offered us (as Chan is getting older) and the West likes to play safe with it's stars, so there are minimal stunts from the action legend Chan is known to be. Yet we do get a thrilling car chase in the streets of Paris and a rather exciting shootout/fight sequence at a hospital and a breath-taking finale filmed at the Eiffel Tower.

There are many flaws in this film, what saves this film from being unbearable (like some of Chris Tucker's jokes) is the on-screen chemistry between Chan and Tucker. Like the previous films, Jackie and Chris bounce off each other with ease and make it out as they are having a lot of fun while working together. Just as expected the outtakes at the end do provide a lot of chuckles and will leave you laughing as you walk out the cinema... and THE ONLY way you will enjoy it as I did is to NOT take it seriously. If you want a life-changing epic, go watch 'The Shawshank Redemption'. If you desire to see an intelligently-written masterpiece, go watch 'The Godfather' or 'Memento'. If you want to switch off your brain, relax and watch a mindless action comedy... Then 'Rush Hour 3' should be able to cater.

3.5/5
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Protégé (2007)
8/10
The Class of 2007
7 August 2007
One of the highly anticipated films of the year, Derek Yee's 'Protege' brings together Andy Lau and Daniel Wu in a tale centred around the world of drug trafficking in Asia.

Nick (Daniel Wu) is a young and ambitious cop who has been working undercover in a drug ring headed by diabetic crime-lord Lai (Andy Lau). During a long course of being undercover, Nick has been able to gain the trust and support of Lai by doing may things against his duty as a policeman - and he is chosen to be his 'protege'. During this he meets Jane (Zhang Jingchu), a young mother who has become an addict due to her husbands' (Louis Koo) actions. While expressing sympathy for Jane's daughter, Jane ends up falling for Nick - but he cannot see past the point that his actions are responsible for people like her becoming addicts. Thus Nick feels the need to reform and do his bit for society.

The film itself resembles Steven Soderbergh's award-winning 'Traffic', the world of drug trafficking is shown in different perspectives. Derek Yee uses detailed character work, exploratory cinematography and visually impeccable locations. Like his previous film 'One Nite In Mongkok' Yee uses the camera and characters to bring the locations to life - highlight being scenes shot at the Golden Triangle - an area of Hong Kong where a lot of the drug-trafficking and production takes place.

Daniel Wu seems to improve with every film he does, this time he plays a rather mixed up man that is guilt ridden by his actions.. where as Andy Lau plays a negative character with ease, looking at the drug trade as pure business: supply and demand. Zhang Jingshu steals the show from everyone as a junkie mother living in a run-down apartment. For instance, the opening shots where she's shown shooting up - no dialogue yet physically expressing her character with such brilliance (her daughter coming into-the shot just touches so deep, hard to not be compelled). Louis Koo proves to be above average as a very unlikeable addict and manages not to overact at times. Support cast such as Anita Yuen and Mei Tan-Hei are underused and represented as one-dimensional characters.

The script is rather tightly wove, that is until the end where it just follows a conventional ending and stating that 'Drugs are bad', which does make the effort seem rushed. But amazing direction, notable performances and a rather interesting point makes 'Protege' a one-of-a-kind Hong Kong movie. There are some action sequences which carry tension,and the chemistry between the main cast carries off as really convincing. This is the kind of movie that a lot of film buffs would love to see: its smart, gritty, intense and shocking. One of the best Hong Kong movies of the year, if not one of the best movies of the year.

Highly recommended.
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4/10
Slightly below average
6 August 2007
Jet Li stars and directs a tale of a Chinese rickshaw-man who offers to be a human punch-bag for American soldiers in post-WWII China. Jet does deliver good direction but the script is rather weak and most fight sequences seem to be rather dull. The finale is an all out Hong Kong cinema fight fest where Jet takes on Yanks in a factory (a fight sequence in which Jet sustained a serious injury and was out of filming for almost 3-4 years). I actually think this movie can be ranked as one of his worse efforts (including 'The Master' and 'The One').

Die hard fans should check it out, but beware: not that great.

**/*****
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