IMDb रेटिंग
5.7/10
5.3 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
एक युवा चीनी अमेरिकी महिला, निकी चेन, चीन में एक पृथक मठ में जाती है. लेकिन जब वह अपराध और भ्रष्टाचार से भरे अपने गृहनगर लौटती है तब वह अपने मार्शल आर्ट कौशल और शाओलिन मूल्यों का उपयोग करके ... सभी पढ़ेंएक युवा चीनी अमेरिकी महिला, निकी चेन, चीन में एक पृथक मठ में जाती है. लेकिन जब वह अपराध और भ्रष्टाचार से भरे अपने गृहनगर लौटती है तब वह अपने मार्शल आर्ट कौशल और शाओलिन मूल्यों का उपयोग करके अपने समुदाय के लिए लड़ती है.एक युवा चीनी अमेरिकी महिला, निकी चेन, चीन में एक पृथक मठ में जाती है. लेकिन जब वह अपराध और भ्रष्टाचार से भरे अपने गृहनगर लौटती है तब वह अपने मार्शल आर्ट कौशल और शाओलिन मूल्यों का उपयोग करके अपने समुदाय के लिए लड़ती है.
- पुरस्कार
- 4 जीत और कुल 10 नामांकन
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Yes, I watched the original Kung Fu and while the story takes a very different Generation Z young female approach to the story, I find it VERY watchable. If you want the same mold as the original, sorry; this will not be your show. But if you can revisit a discipline from a modern Chinese American approach, I think you will appreciate the struggles this young woman is going through. But if ONLY a David Carradine clone will do, then don't bother. I certainly find this show to be above average. I'm not going to say "stellar" in the 8-10 range. As I have gotten further into the series I'm liking the main character even more. The plot line about her aunt is a nice twist.
The first episode was promising but after that it went down hill. It's not a good action series.
Kung Fu appears to have been created by someone who hated every single element of the original except the Kung Fu part. Old west to modern day, Man to woman, last-resort fighting to ready-to-rumble, real-word to supernatural elements, isolated loner to deep family connections. If there is any feature you remember from the original besides a monastery premise and a bunch of fight scenes, you can be assured it's not in this version.
It's really hard to understand why they bothered to say this is based on the original, since it's clearly not.
Some changes are good. The lead character is played by an Asian instead of a white guy who doesn't look remotely Asian. Even as a white kid in the 70s that made zero sense to me. And while it's been years since I saw the original, I think the fight scenes are probably better in this one, although no less gratuitous (in the original, Kaine always said he didn't want to fight, but he fought in every episode).
But let's ignore comparisons to the original and just think about this series as though it is a totally new creation. Is it good on its own terms?
Not really. This is your basic CW teen/early adult drama, with annoying pop songs, a bunch of annoying, attractive young people with dubious acting skills, a hey-kids-let's-put-on-an-investigation approach to crime, and a high annoying quotient. As always, I feel obligated to note that I'm an old man who has a lower tolerance for these series than a youngster - if I'm going to watch a teen show, it needs to be as smart and original as Impulse or Sweet/Vicious.
I wish this were an Asian/female version of the original show, with the same Daoist philosophy and unusual approach. But it's not, it's just another CW show that I can do without. But if you like stuff like Riverdale maybe it's the show for you.
It's really hard to understand why they bothered to say this is based on the original, since it's clearly not.
Some changes are good. The lead character is played by an Asian instead of a white guy who doesn't look remotely Asian. Even as a white kid in the 70s that made zero sense to me. And while it's been years since I saw the original, I think the fight scenes are probably better in this one, although no less gratuitous (in the original, Kaine always said he didn't want to fight, but he fought in every episode).
But let's ignore comparisons to the original and just think about this series as though it is a totally new creation. Is it good on its own terms?
Not really. This is your basic CW teen/early adult drama, with annoying pop songs, a bunch of annoying, attractive young people with dubious acting skills, a hey-kids-let's-put-on-an-investigation approach to crime, and a high annoying quotient. As always, I feel obligated to note that I'm an old man who has a lower tolerance for these series than a youngster - if I'm going to watch a teen show, it needs to be as smart and original as Impulse or Sweet/Vicious.
I wish this were an Asian/female version of the original show, with the same Daoist philosophy and unusual approach. But it's not, it's just another CW show that I can do without. But if you like stuff like Riverdale maybe it's the show for you.
After watching the pilot, I must say I had higher hopes. This is aimed at a young audience, more pre-teen than young adult, but for that genre, it's a decent watch. I had hoped it would be a contemporary spin on the original series, but, then again, I was a young teen when I was a fan of it, so maybe it is the same audience. The plot is simplistic, the fights are engaging, it will appeal to young Asian viewers, and, despite the dumbing down of some of the dialogue, I'm going to give it a passing grade. I give this series a 6 (fair) out of 10. {Action Adventure}
Kung Fu and Kung Fu: The Legend Continues were interesting primarily because there was this one outsider, Cain, with a strong moral code about being kind to others, but who didn't really understand the world around him especially well. Cain would always zero in on some simple truth or flaw that lied at the heart of the episode's conflict, and explain what this was with an outsider's wisdom.
In this version, the new Cain, Nicky, is not an outsider at all. In the first episode, she returns to her childhood home to live with her large family and catch up with her friends. There is no real reason her perspective should be much different to that of the others, and it really isn't in any significant way. She's just a woman who fights well, occasionally with mild superpowers like in the original. The end result is something that's barely different to any other procedural with some mystical MacGuffins thrown in, and it's so very dull.
In this version, the new Cain, Nicky, is not an outsider at all. In the first episode, she returns to her childhood home to live with her large family and catch up with her friends. There is no real reason her perspective should be much different to that of the others, and it really isn't in any significant way. She's just a woman who fights well, occasionally with mild superpowers like in the original. The end result is something that's barely different to any other procedural with some mystical MacGuffins thrown in, and it's so very dull.
क्या आपको पता है
- गूफ़There is a stock footage sequence every week, that shows the streetscape outside the "Harmony Dumpling Restaurant" in Chinatown. There a fake San Francisco cable car in that sequence. You also hear the brassy, insistent ding of a cable car bell, being rung twice. The fake cable car is clearly a two axle motorized vehicle running on four pneumatic rubber tires. The roadway is also missing the required steel tracks as used by a real San Francisco cable car.
San Francisco cable cars have a complicated undercarriage, and the car rides on a pair of four-wheel trucks with flanged iron wheels (no pneumatic rubber tires), designed for the cable car narrow gauge track of 3 ft 6 in (1.067 mm).
- कनेक्शनReferenced in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: 3 Trailers and a Virus (2020)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How many seasons does Kung Fu have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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