sheng_3
Apr. 2000 ist beigetreten
Willkommen auf neuen Profil
Unsere Aktualisierungen befinden sich noch in der Entwicklung. Die vorherige Version Profils ist zwar nicht mehr zugänglich, aber wir arbeiten aktiv an Verbesserungen und einige der fehlenden Funktionen werden bald wieder verfügbar sein! Bleibe dran, bis sie wieder verfügbar sind. In der Zwischenzeit ist Bewertungsanalyse weiterhin in unseren iOS- und Android-Apps verfügbar, die auf deiner Profilseite findest. Damit deine Bewertungsverteilung nach Jahr und Genre angezeigt wird, beziehe dich bitte auf unsere neue Hilfeleitfaden.
Abzeichen3
Wie du dir Kennzeichnungen verdienen kannst, erfährst du unter Hilfeseite für Kennzeichnungen.
Rezensionen14
Bewertung von sheng_3
A pathetic documentary by an incredibly unskilled director. This film is completely destroyed by MTV editing which turned what could have been a heartfelt piece into a 90 min montage. The director annoyingly overlaps dialog several times, never shows more than a few moments of any interview and, instead of relying on the dialog to set the tone and provide details, he simply cuts away repeatedly to the actual thing (or representation of) that the participant is speaking about. Important information is passed over quickly and small, pointless details are examined in excruciating detail (ie there was a delay in the trial becomes a 3 min sequence of calendar swipes). Rapid fire narration degrades it even further! It takes real effort to use compelling subject matter like this and make a bad film out of it! Avoid this at all costs. If there is a book on this case, read that instead.
Talented stuntman/fighter Dan Chupong (Born To Fight) is given little to work with in this repetitive, overlong mess from Thailand. Clearly hoping to bask in the financial glory of Ong Bak and The Protector (aka Tom Yum Goong), this film seems rushed and it shows. The plot is terrible and the acting is substandard (even for a Thai film). The action scenes are poorly conceived and filmed. Slow motion is used for shots that don't deserve it and money shots almost always feature a cutaway revealing the choreographer's complete inability to make the action scenes work. If they get any credit, it's that they don't stoop even lower and use the horrible "shaky, camera on a string" crap to further cover the shortcomings! The character's are cardboard and the set's look like, well, sets! The special effects are cheap (as in most modern Thai films).
Just a reminder to those Thai filmmakers who wish to emulate Ong Bak-
1. Get talented martial artists & stuntmen
2. Concentrate on the quality of the fight scenes and don't give in to CGI and cutaways.
3. Keep the plot simple (the best martial arts films usually have minimal plot)
If you are going to ask those talented stuntmen to risk injury or death, at least try to make a film worth them getting injured for!
Just a reminder to those Thai filmmakers who wish to emulate Ong Bak-
1. Get talented martial artists & stuntmen
2. Concentrate on the quality of the fight scenes and don't give in to CGI and cutaways.
3. Keep the plot simple (the best martial arts films usually have minimal plot)
If you are going to ask those talented stuntmen to risk injury or death, at least try to make a film worth them getting injured for!