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Tin lung baat bou

  • 2023
  • R
  • 2 h 10 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,7/10
2,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Tin lung baat bou (2023)
When a respected martial artist is accused of killing, he goes around in search of answers about his own mysterious origin story and the unknown enemies working to destroy him.
Reproduzir trailer2:12
2 vídeos
9 fotos
Artes marciaisKung FuAçãoAventura

Baseado no romance clássico de wuxia ''Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils'' de Jin Yong.Baseado no romance clássico de wuxia ''Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils'' de Jin Yong.Baseado no romance clássico de wuxia ''Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils'' de Jin Yong.

  • Direção
    • Donnie Yen
    • Ka-Wai Kam
  • Roteiristas
    • He Ben
    • Louis Cha
    • Chen Li
  • Artistas
    • Donnie Yen
    • Yuqi Chen
    • Yase Liu
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,7/10
    2,6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Donnie Yen
      • Ka-Wai Kam
    • Roteiristas
      • He Ben
      • Louis Cha
      • Chen Li
    • Artistas
      • Donnie Yen
      • Yuqi Chen
      • Yase Liu
    • 48Avaliações de usuários
    • 46Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 vitórias e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:12
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    Official Trailer

    Fotos8

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    + 3
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    Elenco principal38

    Editar
    Donnie Yen
    Donnie Yen
    • Kiu Fung
    Yuqi Chen
    Yuqi Chen
    • A Zhu
    Yase Liu
    Yase Liu
    • A Zi
    Yue Wu
    Yue Wu
    • Murong Fu
    Kara Ying Hung Wai
    Kara Ying Hung Wai
    • Ruan Xingzhu
    • (as Kara Wai)
    Eddie Cheung
    Eddie Cheung
    • Duan Zhengchun
    Yuming Du
    Yuming Du
    • Bai Shijing
    Ray Lui
    Ray Lui
    • Murong Bo
    Siu-Ming Tsui
    Siu-Ming Tsui
    • Kumochi
    Cheung-Yan Yuen
    Cheung-Yan Yuen
    • Xue Muhua
    Pan Hongliang
    • Bao Qianling
    Zhonghua Li
    • Elder Song
    Guorong Liang
    • Elder Wu
    Cheng Cheng
    • Elder Xi
    Dehui Zhang
    • Elder Chen
    Guo Jiulong
    • Elder Xu
    • (as Jiulong Guo)
    Hua Yan
    • Ma Dayuan
    Xiangyu Cai
    • A Bi
    • Direção
      • Donnie Yen
      • Ka-Wai Kam
    • Roteiristas
      • He Ben
      • Louis Cha
      • Chen Li
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários48

    5,72.5K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6ObsessiveCinemaDisorder

    An impressive visualization of Louis Cha's wuxia world, spectacular martial arts scenes but falls short on storytelling

    Sakra, a martial arts fantasy film produced and co-directed by Donnie Yen, delivers a grounded and gloriously detailed vision of Louis Cha's wuxia world, featuring spectacular martial arts choreography and beautiful production design.

    While Sakra soars with its action, it falls short on storytelling. The script starts solidly but rushes to set up the sequel in its final act, sacrificing character depth for scope.

    Adapted from Louis Cha's classic wuxia novel Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils, the story is set during the Song Empire. Qiao Feng, the orphan leader of the Beggar's Sect, is framed for murdering sect leader Ma Dayuan and his adopted parents.

    Qiao Feng is revealed to be a Khitan, the warring enemy of the Song Empire, and is banished from the Beggar's Sect. Wrestling with his new identity, Qiao Feng seeks the murderer of his adopted parents among the martial arts clans...

    For Sakra, Donnie Yen drew from his experience choreographing 2006's comic book adaptation Dragon Tiger Gate and absorbed the lessons from the CGI-driven Storm Riders series, and creates a realism with its own set of rules.

    There are long horse riding sequences through real Chinese landscapes, in which the film invests its time in. This grounds the wuxia world and presents a sense of geographic scale where heroes ride for days.

    Every martial arts move, whether realistic or fantastical, is motivated, has weight, and flows well.

    The stunt team has meticulously worked out all the power levels for the fighting. The way the fights escalate from sparring to superhuman feats to eventual chi blasts flows exceptionally well. You never question why a fighter didn't begin with their ultimate finishing move as there are physical limits in place and using a powerful move comes with immense strain.

    People do fly, but sparingly. The way the film presents chi, as a steamy wave of hot air, was perfect.

    All that said, the appeal of Louis Cha's wuxia stories is story and characters, not just fighting. The biggest challenge of adapting Louis Cha is condensing the material, which is why the best adaptations have been for TV.

    Sakra uses its screentime disproportionally, devoting a lot of time to developing the Qiao Feng character in the first half. As we move to the second half, the script struggles to downsize the immense scale of Louis Cha's novel and plays like a showreel. New characters pop up to set up the next movie in a Marvel-like fashion. Being unfamiliar with the source material, I was confused and lost.

    While there are many great things about it, Sakra ends up being a big missed opportunity and will be remembered most for its fight sequences. A Louis Cha wuxia cinematic universe would be awesome.

    You know when a football player is about to score a goal and then fumbles the ball, and the sports fans scream passionately at the television? Sakra made me feel that way.

    It's... almost there... if it can only... Sigh...
    6tlogan8

    Entertaining action film that's not very good.

    I'll make this short and sweet...

    The script is predictable and unoriginal...

    The direction is poor...

    The editing extremely disjointed...

    CGI is very good...

    Overall, this is a visually stunning action ride but that is not enough to keep me entertain for 2 hours. The plot and editing is all over the place making it very frustrating to follow and I find myself waiting for just the action scenes without caring for any of the characters or story.

    As much as I enjoy Donnie Yen's work I'm not sure that directing this film himself is the right choice for this project, but that's just my opinion.
    6tkdlifemagazine

    A Modern Wuxia Fantasy, Martial Arts

    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.
    3PartTimeCritic

    Skip the Film - Youtube the Fight Scenes

    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.
    6OniFR

    Sakra - The Art of Kung Fu on Steroids

    When Donnie Yen steps back behind the camera, you expect a masterclass. Instead, it feels like he skipped the lesson on subtle digital de-aging. With his CGI-smoothened face, Donnie looks like he borrowed Snapchat's anti-aging filter. It's borderline comical watching a "young" 59-year-old pulling off flips and striking Goku-like poses, ready to unleash a Kamehameha. Believability? About as solid as Obelix on a vegan diet.

    Where Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was a poetic symphony of martial arts, Sakra is its drunken karaoke cousin. The film flings everything at you-characters flying, fighting, crying, and delivering lines so overblown even Vegeta would blush. It's stuffed with dialogue straight out of a Naruto filler episode, dressed up in big-budget sets and costumes that remind you this is still a Donnie Yen production.

    The special effects? Oh boy. Between a digital dragon that looks like a screensaver and chi blasts straight out of a 90s VHS intro, the visuals are far from masterpiece territory. It undercuts fights that might have been iconic otherwise. The choreography is breathtaking, but the overuse of green screens and cheesy effects yanks you right out of the action. Honestly, the 1993 Power Rangers had more credible visuals.

    The plot? Shakespeare, but kung fu style-and poorly digested. Qiao Feng, our disgraced hero, drags his sword and tarnished honor through a gauntlet of twists so far-fetched they might have been written by a Red Bull-fueled screenwriter. The stakes are there, but everything feels hollow, like a lightsaber duel without the "vwoosh." It tries to be tragic, but often stumbles into unintentional comedy.

    And yet, it's hard to stay mad at Sakra. Martial arts fans will feast on the dazzling fight sequences, which remain the movie's undeniable highlight. Donnie Yen still knows how to deliver jaw-dropping action with a side of airborne theatrics. Sakra is a guilty pleasure-a mix of epic spectacle and sheer WTF moments, perfect for a no-pressure movie night with snacks in hand.

    Tin Lung Baat Bou (Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils) reminds us that Donnie Yen can still wow us, even if the CGI occasionally stings the eyes. With its questionable effects, freewheeling plot, and awe-inspiring battles, Sakra is equal parts epic and absurd. Worth watching for the fun-but don't expect a masterpiece... unless you're into dragons that look like they were made in Microsoft Paint.

    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      Eighteen 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
    • Erros de gravação
      Todas as entradas contêm spoilers
    • Conexões
      Remake of Tian long ba bu (2021)

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Sakra?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 19 de janeiro de 2023 (Hong Kong)
    • Países de origem
      • Hong Kong
      • China
    • Idiomas
      • Mandarim
      • Cantonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Sakra
    • Locações de filme
      • China(Mainland China)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Plus Entertainment
      • Wishart Media
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 728.930
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 10 min(130 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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