NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
2,7 k
MA NOTE
Après avoir été accusé de meurtre, un artiste martial respecté va d'un endroit à l'autre à la recherche de réponses sur ses origines mystérieuses et sur les ennemis inconnus qui cherchent à ... Tout lireAprès avoir été accusé de meurtre, un artiste martial respecté va d'un endroit à l'autre à la recherche de réponses sur ses origines mystérieuses et sur les ennemis inconnus qui cherchent à le détruire.Après avoir été accusé de meurtre, un artiste martial respecté va d'un endroit à l'autre à la recherche de réponses sur ses origines mystérieuses et sur les ennemis inconnus qui cherchent à le détruire.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Stars
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires et 1 nomination au total
Kara Ying Hung Wai
- Ruan Xingzhu
- (as Kara Wai)
Guo Jiulong
- Elder Xu
- (as Jiulong Guo)
Avis à la une
Of course I opted to sit down and watch the 2023 Chinese action movie "Tin Lung Baat Bou" (aka "Sakra") as I had the opportunity to do so. Why? Well, because of my fascination with Asian cinema, but also because the movie was starring Donnie Yen.
The storyline in "Tin Lung Baat Bou", as written by He Ben, Chen Li, Sheng Lingzhi, Lejing Shen, Xu Yifan and Wei Zhu was quite good. I am not familiar with the novel "Demi Gods and Semi-Devils" from Louis Cha that the movie is based upon, so how true it is to the source material, I have no idea. But the storyline in the movie proved to be rather enjoyable and entertaining, which was the sole purpose of the movie. So thumbs up to all the writers for accomplishing that.
The acting was good in the movie, though I was only familiar with Donnie Yen on the cast list. I have to say that "Tin Lung Baat Bou" definitely sees Donnie Yen back in top form on the screen, and it was quite the pleasure to watch him in this movie.
The action and martial arts scenes throughout the course of the 130 minutes that the movie ran for was good. Nay, strike that, it was intense and adrenaline-packed. I have never actually witnessed such intensity in a martial arts movie as I did here from directors Ka-Wai Kam and Donnie Yen. It was amazing and really added a lot of enjoyment to the movie. Again, it was phenomenal to see Donnie Yen in top form as he brought the action to the screen here, both in front and behind the camera.
The cinematography in "Tin Lung Baat Bou" was good and dynamic. I liked the way that they moved the cameras about and added a dynamic range to the martial arts scenes.
Visually then "Tin Lung Baat Bou" was quite good. The special effects looked good and worked well in favor of the movie.
If you enjoy Wuxia martial arts, I believe the term is, then you should definitely find the time to sit down and watch "Tin Lung Baat Bou". I was genuinely entertained from start to end. And even with a play time of 130 minutes, the movie didn't feel sluggish or slow at any time.
My rating of "Tin Lung Baat Bou" lands on a well-deserved eight out of ten stars.
The storyline in "Tin Lung Baat Bou", as written by He Ben, Chen Li, Sheng Lingzhi, Lejing Shen, Xu Yifan and Wei Zhu was quite good. I am not familiar with the novel "Demi Gods and Semi-Devils" from Louis Cha that the movie is based upon, so how true it is to the source material, I have no idea. But the storyline in the movie proved to be rather enjoyable and entertaining, which was the sole purpose of the movie. So thumbs up to all the writers for accomplishing that.
The acting was good in the movie, though I was only familiar with Donnie Yen on the cast list. I have to say that "Tin Lung Baat Bou" definitely sees Donnie Yen back in top form on the screen, and it was quite the pleasure to watch him in this movie.
The action and martial arts scenes throughout the course of the 130 minutes that the movie ran for was good. Nay, strike that, it was intense and adrenaline-packed. I have never actually witnessed such intensity in a martial arts movie as I did here from directors Ka-Wai Kam and Donnie Yen. It was amazing and really added a lot of enjoyment to the movie. Again, it was phenomenal to see Donnie Yen in top form as he brought the action to the screen here, both in front and behind the camera.
The cinematography in "Tin Lung Baat Bou" was good and dynamic. I liked the way that they moved the cameras about and added a dynamic range to the martial arts scenes.
Visually then "Tin Lung Baat Bou" was quite good. The special effects looked good and worked well in favor of the movie.
If you enjoy Wuxia martial arts, I believe the term is, then you should definitely find the time to sit down and watch "Tin Lung Baat Bou". I was genuinely entertained from start to end. And even with a play time of 130 minutes, the movie didn't feel sluggish or slow at any time.
My rating of "Tin Lung Baat Bou" lands on a well-deserved eight out of ten stars.
It is an adaptation of the "Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils," from Jin Yong's Wuxia novel. Well, the storyline is pretty simple and straightforward, very much like KungFu Cult Master, whereby the main character is accused of many incidents, and all sects attempt to kill him, and that's where the fight starts and ends.
The pace is alright, packed with action, BUT it could be slow at certain parts! I thought it had ended several times, but it keeps going with a runtime of 130 minutes!
In terms of actions, I like it very much! You could feel the strengths and forces of every hit, and the CGI has enhanced the visual excitement to another level! They really did a great job of combining the "wirework + CGI" and martial arts into a more effective action movie.
A few drawbacks as follows:
Firstly, the movie slows down due to the relationship between Qiao Feng and A Zhu. Yet, it's NOT well managed in such a way that it disrupts the flow and momentum of the movie!
Secondly, Donnie Yen appears to be only good in action, BUT not in romance! There is no spark of chemistry between Qiao Feng and A Zhu! Donnie's acting is rather stiff when it comes to intimate moments with A Zhu. Somehow it's more like a father-daughter relationship than a lover's.
Thirdly, the sub-plot in the 2nd half is rather odd, especially on the introduction of new characters of A Zu's parents and her rebellious sister. It could be due to time constraints, things are rushing off, so it does not gel well to the overall movie and looks disconnected!
Finally, with the ending, we could predict that there may be Part 2 in future. Since it will be a sequel, why NOT break this movie into 2 decent movies, instead of rushing everything out, causing an uneven focus on some details. Also I believe that audiences could enjoy it better, rather than having watched a lengthy movie without proper addresses of some plots.
I gave 6/ 10. Despite the weaknesses above, it's an ok movie for casual entertainment. As said, I love the action and fighting scenes, with the right speed, strength, and force! A watch-able one for this Chinese New Year! Go, Go, Go!!
The pace is alright, packed with action, BUT it could be slow at certain parts! I thought it had ended several times, but it keeps going with a runtime of 130 minutes!
In terms of actions, I like it very much! You could feel the strengths and forces of every hit, and the CGI has enhanced the visual excitement to another level! They really did a great job of combining the "wirework + CGI" and martial arts into a more effective action movie.
A few drawbacks as follows:
Firstly, the movie slows down due to the relationship between Qiao Feng and A Zhu. Yet, it's NOT well managed in such a way that it disrupts the flow and momentum of the movie!
Secondly, Donnie Yen appears to be only good in action, BUT not in romance! There is no spark of chemistry between Qiao Feng and A Zhu! Donnie's acting is rather stiff when it comes to intimate moments with A Zhu. Somehow it's more like a father-daughter relationship than a lover's.
Thirdly, the sub-plot in the 2nd half is rather odd, especially on the introduction of new characters of A Zu's parents and her rebellious sister. It could be due to time constraints, things are rushing off, so it does not gel well to the overall movie and looks disconnected!
Finally, with the ending, we could predict that there may be Part 2 in future. Since it will be a sequel, why NOT break this movie into 2 decent movies, instead of rushing everything out, causing an uneven focus on some details. Also I believe that audiences could enjoy it better, rather than having watched a lengthy movie without proper addresses of some plots.
I gave 6/ 10. Despite the weaknesses above, it's an ok movie for casual entertainment. As said, I love the action and fighting scenes, with the right speed, strength, and force! A watch-able one for this Chinese New Year! Go, Go, Go!!
International martial arts and action superstar, Donnie Yen, wrote, Directed, and stars in this martial arts epic adaptation of Louis Cha's Chinese fantasy novel. It is an action packed, larger than life tale of a respected warrior, betrayed, and forced to defend his name and honor.
The film is visually stunning and packed with fantastic martial arts fight scenes, fanciful costumes, and epic sets. It is a large scale, family oriented action fantasy, despite its significant martial arts and sword violence. It is an ambitious project with a lot of heart. It deliberately has many of the tropes of Chinese Kung Fu films, such as revenge, honor, and the desire to right a great wrong, even at the cost of the star's own life.
The production of the film is somewhere between American Western and Chinese martial arts fantasy, and it works for what it is. What it is not is the gritty, realistic type martial arts action film that Donnie Yen has become known for in recent years. While the cinematography and fight choreography are very good, they are not similar to his work in Flash Point, or John Wick 4.
Yen and the acting from the supporting cast is very good, but it is appropriately hyperbolic to match the script, the story, and the genre.
The film is very enjoyable. If you love Wuxia films add an additional star, and if you love Donnie Yen, add one more. While I am not a huge fan of Wuxi films, or high wire based, martial arts action films I do love DONNIE YEN and this was worth seeing.
This international Wuxi fantasy is distributed by Well Go USA and is in Chinese with English subtitles.
The film is visually stunning and packed with fantastic martial arts fight scenes, fanciful costumes, and epic sets. It is a large scale, family oriented action fantasy, despite its significant martial arts and sword violence. It is an ambitious project with a lot of heart. It deliberately has many of the tropes of Chinese Kung Fu films, such as revenge, honor, and the desire to right a great wrong, even at the cost of the star's own life.
The production of the film is somewhere between American Western and Chinese martial arts fantasy, and it works for what it is. What it is not is the gritty, realistic type martial arts action film that Donnie Yen has become known for in recent years. While the cinematography and fight choreography are very good, they are not similar to his work in Flash Point, or John Wick 4.
Yen and the acting from the supporting cast is very good, but it is appropriately hyperbolic to match the script, the story, and the genre.
The film is very enjoyable. If you love Wuxia films add an additional star, and if you love Donnie Yen, add one more. While I am not a huge fan of Wuxi films, or high wire based, martial arts action films I do love DONNIE YEN and this was worth seeing.
This international Wuxi fantasy is distributed by Well Go USA and is in Chinese with English subtitles.
It's an adaptation of Jian Yong's Demi God and Semi Devil, most chinese or Asian would have knew the story path, it's like the story of Arthur and Merlin... Without even any plot twist jumbled into a 30 minuted movie. The original normally spans 40-50 hours long with lots of plot twist.
And the protagonist fails to even decide whether he wants to be a kungfu practitioners or a wuxia fantasy inner strenght no hit everybody fly around
The female protagonist cant act, Donnie has a bit of charisma but lacking acting range.
Overall a convulated mess. I'd still pay to see it for the action but it's nothing more than a superhero movie.
He was written as strong but not all conquering strong.
And the protagonist fails to even decide whether he wants to be a kungfu practitioners or a wuxia fantasy inner strenght no hit everybody fly around
The female protagonist cant act, Donnie has a bit of charisma but lacking acting range.
Overall a convulated mess. I'd still pay to see it for the action but it's nothing more than a superhero movie.
He was written as strong but not all conquering strong.
SAKRA (C-) is Donnie Yen's attempt at crafting a new epic Wuxia classic, bit instead crafts three decent action sequences surrounded by a hot flaming mess of storytelling. I'm not even going to try and give a plot description other than to say it takes place in Ancient China and features a horrifically confusing and unnecessarily convoluted plot with Donnie Yen's good guy kung fu artist constantly being in the wrong place at the wrong time. It's apparently based on a wuxia novel series that's rooted in Buddhist ideas, but it's just not very accessible, even for a charitable and engaged outsider like me. I knew I was in for a confusing mess when even the opening title cards were a confusing mess of an English translation. The good news is that the large budget is all on the screen with incredible looking sets and great costumes. Donnie Yen has been quoted as saying this was his attempt to make a Marvel like film using the wuxia genre and he absolutely failed to do so. He doesn't seem to recognize that the power of the first few phases of Marvel films was in how simple and straightforward they were: Simple plots with instantly likeable characters and great action sequences. Sakra does emulate some of the superhero like abilities into its action sequences, but Yen's character largely mopes about the film while most scenes feature endless talking and complications. The three major action sequences we get are pretty good, featuring impressive wire work and stunts, but they also feature oppressive sound design and CGI that feels like it could have used a bit more love. Skip the film and youtube the fight sequences in a few months from now.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesEighteen Dragon-Subduing Palms is Qiau Feng signature and highest kung fu moves. Eighteen Dragon-Subduing Palms was one of the top and most famous kungfu style of Hung Chi Qong (Qiao Feng's successor), also known as the heroic Northern Beggar. Hung Chi was 1 of the most feared and respected grand masters. You can see Hung Chi Qong's origin story in 1994's Ashes of Time
- GaffesToutes les informations contiennent des spoilers
- ConnexionsRemake of Tian long ba bu (2021)
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- How long is Sakra?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 728 930 $US
- Durée
- 2h 10min(130 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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