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Ip Man: Final Fight

Originaltitel: Yip Man: Jung gik yat zin
  • 2013
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 40 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,1/10
11.728
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ip Man: Final Fight (2013)
 In postwar Hong Kong, legendary Wing Chun grandmaster Ip Man is reluctantly called into action once more, when what begin as simple challenges from rival kung fu styles soon draw him into the dark and dangerous underworld of the Triads. Now, to defend li
trailer wiedergeben1:09
3 Videos
99+ Fotos
KampfkünsteKung FuAktionBiographieDrama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn postwar Hong Kong, legendary Wing Chun grandmaster Ip Man is reluctantly called into action once more, when what begin as simple challenges from rival kung fu styles soon draw him into th... Alles lesenIn postwar Hong Kong, legendary Wing Chun grandmaster Ip Man is reluctantly called into action once more, when what begin as simple challenges from rival kung fu styles soon draw him into the dark and dangerous underworld of the Triads. Now, to defend life and honor, he has no ch... Alles lesenIn postwar Hong Kong, legendary Wing Chun grandmaster Ip Man is reluctantly called into action once more, when what begin as simple challenges from rival kung fu styles soon draw him into the dark and dangerous underworld of the Triads. Now, to defend life and honor, he has no choice but to fight one last time ...

  • Regie
    • Herman Yau
  • Drehbuch
    • Erica Li
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
    • Gillian Chung
    • Jordan Chan
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,1/10
    11.728
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Herman Yau
    • Drehbuch
      • Erica Li
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
      • Gillian Chung
      • Jordan Chan
    • 24Benutzerrezensionen
    • 55Kritische Rezensionen
    • 55Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Gewinne & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos3

    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Trailer 1:09
    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Trailer 1:44
    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Trailer 1:44
    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Ip Man: The Final Fight
    Trailer 1:45
    Ip Man: The Final Fight

    Fotos157

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    Topbesetzung43

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    Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
    Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
    • Yip Man
    Gillian Chung
    Gillian Chung
    • Chan Sei-mui
    Jordan Chan
    Jordan Chan
    • Tang Shing
    Eric Tsang
    Eric Tsang
    • Ng Chung
    Marvel Chow
    • Wang Dong
    Chuchu Zhou
    Chuchu Zhou
    • Jenny
    • (as Zhou Chuchu)
    Timmy Hung
    Timmy Hung
    • Leung Sheung
    Luxia Jiang
    Luxia Jiang
    • Le King
    Xiong Xinxin
    Xiong Xinxin
    • Local Dragon
    • (as Xin Xin Xiong)
    Chun Ip
    • Stall owner with phone
    Anita Yuen
    Anita Yuen
    • Cheung Wing-Sing
    Kai-Chi Liu
    Kai-Chi Liu
    • Lee Yiu-wah
    Cho-Lam Wong
    Cho-Lam Wong
    • Blind Chan
    Jonathan Chee Hynn Wong
    Jonathan Chee Hynn Wong
    • Ngai Tong
    • (as Jonathan Wong)
    Leo Au-Yeung
    • Fat Choi
    Aki Chan
    • Worker
    Cho Kwai Chee
    • Queen Mary Hospital Doctor
    Queenie Chu
    Queenie Chu
    • Sophie
    • Regie
      • Herman Yau
    • Drehbuch
      • Erica Li
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen24

    6,111.7K
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    8castala

    Well above the average

    I've spent the 1992 year in Beijing, People's Republic of China. While I was there to work as a foreign expert, I had the chance to work for China Films, where they were writing subtitles for Chinese movies which were exported to abroad customers. Most of the films were Kung Fu movies, and in all of them, the dialogues were so dumb it was laughable. it's not the case with this film. This a well-made movie, with nice battle scenes, but also with an interesting story about a real character. This Master of Wung Shin was the teacher of Bruce Lee. The story is going on from 1949 to the end of the 1960's. It's rather interesting. The version I've watched was in Cantonese, with subtitles, and I recommend it.
    6hkauteur

    HK Auteur Review - Ip Man: The Final Fight 葉問:終極一戰

    The most interesting aspect between Herman Yau-Anthony Wong collaborations is that their partnership had its roots in Hong Kong Category III horror. Ebola Syndrome is still one of the most disgusting movies I have ever seen and been guiltily entertained by. Forget Outbreak or Contagion, Ebola Syndrome was a far more disturbing movie about a viral outbreak. Forget Hannibal Lecter, Anthony Wong truly played a disturbing sociopath in that movie. The point is: they're not afraid to delve into the gritty, the ugly and the disgusting.

    Set against the big commercial movie cog machine and the Ip Man franchise, the majority of Yau-Wong penchant for grittiness is diluted and only some of it remains in Ip Man: The Final Fight. It is that essence of the grittier and the uglier sides of Ip Man that makes out for the more interesting parts in Ip Man: The Final Fight, but it's also the film's major weakness because it never treads far enough from familiar territory.

    What the film ends up being more like tonally is a combination of the Wilson Yip- Donnie Yen Ip Man films and Bruce Lee My Brother, where it is loosely glossing over the details of the grandmaster's life and dramatically punching up the action so it can allow for fight scenes, but also providing a retro-gaze of Hong Kong accompanied with a celebrity guest-list cameos.

    For example, it's been said that Ip Man sported an opium habit. The concept is telegraphed but never truly explored. Another example is Hong Kong actor Liu Kai Chi gives a cameo as Ip Man's friend who is suffering from poverty. They start what might be a potentially interesting storyline but it never finishes itself. Much of the film is like that.

    There are about several subplots running through the story and they all end up as separate vignettes that do not rise above the sum of it's parts. For a biopic drama, that's a problem because it does not provide an unified narrative goal. This is not an editing issue. The story was based on Ip Chun's stories of his father and it is as if seemed like the screenwriter noted them down as told and the director literally shot them that way. So I attribute this issue to lazy writing. The retroactive voice-over device ends up killing a lot of the drama. The scene will be happening and the voice-over will cut in summing up the rest of the scene in past tense. It keeps glossing over by stating what happened instead of letting the audience experience what's happening in the now.

    Anthony Wong is very natural as Ip Man. He looks most like the real-life version of Ip Man and actually adopts a Foshan accent. He breathes many colors into the role and the scenes with Ip Man and his students is the heart of the film. Anthony Wong is pretty much the best thing about this movie and his performance alone is the price of admission.

    Eric Tsang has a great supporting role as a Crane style master who befriends Ip Man. There is a self-referential joke where Tsang says being a 'clan master' (獎門人) is difficult, a reference to his famous television game show, that was self-serving and unnecessary. Tsang and Wong share an awesome fight together. Not a lot of people remember that Eric Tsang started out as a stuntman; the fight looks very authentic. They were really smashing their forearms together. Eric Tsang is a badass.

    Something I noticed about the cinematography was there were way too many crane shots in this film. There's a scene that ends on a connective moment between two characters and then it cuts to a crane shot backing away presenting a view of the entire rooftop set. I have a theory about this. In Hong Kong, booking a crane from a production house is a planned expense and usually you would require more crew members or more time to set up a crane shot. Production houses in the Mainland will give crews an entire film equipment package in their deals, which includes cranes and jibs. With the cheap labor and higher amount of crew members, a crane shot can be set up much faster in the Mainland. As a recent occurrence, a lot of Chinese productions lead by Hong Kong directors have recently been very crane shot-heavy. Hong Kong directors, this needs to stop. You have to remember to pull back every once and a while.

    Just as a small footnote, I really hated the Bruce Lee cameo. Playing Bruce Lee in a film is by no means an easy feat but the actor they chose was abysmally awful. He made Bruce Lee look like a rich asshole sellout. It was not fun, nor did it work as a pop culture reference.

    Overall, I enjoyed this film, but I do not think it works completely as a standalone piece. It seems to fit as the final piece to this whole line of Ip Man films. In a way, I can't help it because they've made so many movies about Ip Man in such a short time.

    With every film, I see a little more of who this man was, what his legacy was and it had me thinking about even what being a good teacher means. I still think The Grandmaster is the best Ip Man film. They really don't need to make any more Ip Man movies. And if they do (and I think they are because I saw a poster for an Ip Man 3 with Donnie Yen), please do the story with Bruce Lee and get him right.

    For more reviews, please visit my blog at http://hkauteur.wordpress.com/
    4chiggaboy88

    A confused movie

    Not the worst HK movie I've ever seen, but pretty far down there. Overall, I think the movie just never figured out what it wanted to be. Does it want to be a biography of Ip Man? Does it want to be a nostalgic piece to serve as a trip down memory lane for older Hong Kong citizens? Is this a movie to profile an iconic figure or a movie to give as much air time to multiple movie stars? In its attempt to honour Ip Man, the movie creates a wooden character of him which leaves little room for character development or interesting acting from Anthony Wong. Weakness is a trait that all humans have, but the movie does its best to remove as much of this trait from its portrayal of Ip Man as possible to immortalize him as some sort of legendary figure. Even in scenes where weakness is demonstrated, so little of it is explored that the audience is left with little to empathize with.

    As part of that attempt to honour him, the movie makers tried to tie in as many characters and story lines from Ip Man's real life as possible. But again, its a mess. Few of those characters are developed and we never really get a chance to care about who they are below the surface. For example, I would have loved to see more of who Eric Tsang and Jordan Chan's characters really were.

    As a final disappointment, scenes near the end of the movie totally betray the tone and style of the overall movie as well.

    Watchable, but unfocused, disjointed and unorganized. A reminder to me why I have slowly drifted away from Hong Kong movies...
    7kosmasp

    Yip Man, the latter/last

    Well it can't be said for sure, if it's the last one, but it does feel like a closure to a series that has spawned for movies altogether. While the first two remain the best (with zero being the weak link in that chain, though there are always worse movies as I like to say), this is a fine addition and nice round up.

    Not only do you have two fine (mature) actors opposite/side-to-side, you also have a story that is told. A story that tries to show us, that violence is not key. Don't worry though, there is plenty of great action scenes in it. It actually heightens those scenes, when you have something solid in between them, that makes you wait for them
    6isaacsundaralingam

    Not bad, but not too good either

    • Features a more somber and human portrayal of Ip Man unlike its big blockbuster counterparts... and Anthony Wong deserves credit for the way in which he lives the character out.


    • The dialogues were laughable at certain points; especially whenever Wing Chun was being discussed... It was as if the writers were too caught up with how cool they presumed Wing Chun to be, that they didn't realize how much of what they wrote came across as blatant Wing Chun propaganda.


    • Everything about the final showdown (or "The Final Fight") felt tiresome:
    * The lead up to it seemed forced; as if to find a way to end the movie with an all-out brawl, * The editing was too pacey and choppy, as if to compensate for lackluster fight choreography and * The choreography itself, which played out as such; good people who know Wing Chun vs bad people who don't know Wing Chun

    • Also, the Bruce Lee "cameo" could've been avoided, or at least cast more accurately.


    Overall, it's a movie that is unable to decide between the humanity and the action that involves the grandmaster; and therefore combines them both to do neither any justice.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Ip Man's son, Ip Chun, makes a short cameo in the movie. Appearing when Ip Man was telephoned about his wife died.
    • Patzer
      When Ip Man arrives in Hong Kong in 1949, a Volkswagen Type 2 (aka Camper or Minibus) passes in front of him on the street. The first Type 2's were not produced until mid-November 1949 and the vehicle was not available for sale until 1950.
    • Verbindungen
      Follows Ip Man Zero (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Ping Shui Xiang Feng
      Composed by Yao Nin

      Lyrics by Yang Yan Qi

      Sung by Wu Ying Yin

      [OP: EMI Music Publishing Hong Kong

      License courtesy of EMI Music Hong Kong, admin by Warner Music Hong Kong Ltd]

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 28. März 2013 (Hongkong)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Hongkong
    • Sprache
      • Kantonesisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Ip Man: The Final Fight
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • National Arts Films Production
      • Emperor Film Production
      • Prosperity Pictures
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 37.884 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 15.514 $
      • 22. Sept. 2013
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 3.967.001 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 40 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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