A mysterious group kidnap a girl's sister. Years later, the group reappears and she is determined to get her sister back.A mysterious group kidnap a girl's sister. Years later, the group reappears and she is determined to get her sister back.A mysterious group kidnap a girl's sister. Years later, the group reappears and she is determined to get her sister back.
Richard Heselton
- Keith
- (as Richard William Heselton)
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When Rina is fighting, the movie is exciting. The rest is dull, talky and mostly wooden. I recommend fast-forward for everything between the sisters' action sequences, to avoid boredom that can dilute the impact of her artistry. Rina deserves better vehicles.
Having just seen "High Kick Girl", it was with a certain amount of dread of expectation of disappointment that I sat down to watch "Karate Girl" (or "K.G."). However, those disappointments and fears were quickly swept away, as this movie was a rather nice step up compared to the other movie - both story-wise, production-wise and entertainment-wise.
The story in "Karate Girl" was rather enjoyable and had quite more depth to it, than what was seen in "High Kick Girl". The story is helped along nicely but more well-choreographed martial arts and better acting. The story told in this movie is about a legendary martial arts master whose belt is coveted by some 'bad guy'. He invades a dojo and kills the martial arts master here in order to obtain it, as well as killing one of his two daughters, while kidnapping the second to raise and turn into a killing weapon. Having survived the ordeal, Ayaka (Rina Takeda) grows up carrying around her family secret, and comes face to face, literally, with her past.
And one of the best things about the movie was the fact that they had moved away from having to show the same scene two times over, in either slow motion or in a slightly different angle. Sure, it does still happen every once in awhile here in this movie, but not like "High Kick Girl".
If you have seen "High Kick Girl", I strongly suggest you forget all about it and move on to watch "Karate Girl", as it is better in every single aspect, despite having a fair amount of faces appear from "High Kick Girl" in this movie as well.
"Karate Girl" is actually good entertaining, though not amongst the highest ranking martial arts movies, but still, it delivered and entertained.
The story in "Karate Girl" was rather enjoyable and had quite more depth to it, than what was seen in "High Kick Girl". The story is helped along nicely but more well-choreographed martial arts and better acting. The story told in this movie is about a legendary martial arts master whose belt is coveted by some 'bad guy'. He invades a dojo and kills the martial arts master here in order to obtain it, as well as killing one of his two daughters, while kidnapping the second to raise and turn into a killing weapon. Having survived the ordeal, Ayaka (Rina Takeda) grows up carrying around her family secret, and comes face to face, literally, with her past.
And one of the best things about the movie was the fact that they had moved away from having to show the same scene two times over, in either slow motion or in a slightly different angle. Sure, it does still happen every once in awhile here in this movie, but not like "High Kick Girl".
If you have seen "High Kick Girl", I strongly suggest you forget all about it and move on to watch "Karate Girl", as it is better in every single aspect, despite having a fair amount of faces appear from "High Kick Girl" in this movie as well.
"Karate Girl" is actually good entertaining, though not amongst the highest ranking martial arts movies, but still, it delivered and entertained.
The quality of Japanese movies in this genre has always been so so at best, but it seems to be slipping downwards in recent years.
Story of this movie is pretty derivative. There's a family of outrageously potent karate masters who in the old age killed any opponent with one blow. The modern descendant of this clan gets attacked by another group of criminal martial artists. The father is killed, and two small daughters survive. About ten years later, the grown up daughter is found by the martial artist gang, and is being targeted again. It's revenge for the girl, and finishing the unfinished business for the bad guys.
The movie has pretty bad action scenes. There's not a hint of moves that shows that any of the characters are who they are supposed to be. The moves don't look real, and this is probably not the fault of the actors, but due to bad choreography. Also, they could have put little more attention to staging the each act. It's reminiscent of cheaply made adult videos in many areas.
The level of Japanese action movies are about where Hong Kong movies were in the early '70s. Compared to the action scenes of say like the "Ip Man 2" there's really no contest.
There are period action pieces coming out of Japan that still holds quality, but ones that are positioned in the modern era has been going down hill.
There are better made movies in martial arts genre, and you'd probably better served watching those.
Story of this movie is pretty derivative. There's a family of outrageously potent karate masters who in the old age killed any opponent with one blow. The modern descendant of this clan gets attacked by another group of criminal martial artists. The father is killed, and two small daughters survive. About ten years later, the grown up daughter is found by the martial artist gang, and is being targeted again. It's revenge for the girl, and finishing the unfinished business for the bad guys.
The movie has pretty bad action scenes. There's not a hint of moves that shows that any of the characters are who they are supposed to be. The moves don't look real, and this is probably not the fault of the actors, but due to bad choreography. Also, they could have put little more attention to staging the each act. It's reminiscent of cheaply made adult videos in many areas.
The level of Japanese action movies are about where Hong Kong movies were in the early '70s. Compared to the action scenes of say like the "Ip Man 2" there's really no contest.
There are period action pieces coming out of Japan that still holds quality, but ones that are positioned in the modern era has been going down hill.
There are better made movies in martial arts genre, and you'd probably better served watching those.
Karate Girl is certainly better than the numerous overrated karate movies starring American or Chinese actresses and actors that have flooded the market throughout the past few decades. The story revolves around a young woman working at a cinema who has a troublesome past. Her father was assassinated and her little sister kidnapped by a group of thugs. The young woman secretly survived, changed her identity and got adopted by another family. When she is filmed fighting two thieves at the cinema and the clip goes viral, the thugs however realize that she is still alive and want to annihilate her.
This movie convinces on several levels. The atmospheric opening scene and multiple flashbacks are quite atmospheric, emotional and violent. The film's locations vary fluidly between beautiful settings and gloomy spaces. This tale of revenge doesn't offer any surprising twists but should appeal to fans of classic martial arts movies from the seventies and eighties in particular.
However, this release certainly isn't without its flaws. The acting performances are at times wooden, repetitive and predictable. The fight scenes lack authentic choreography and look at times unintentionally funny. The film suffers from rather slow pace and repetition and would have been much more efficient if it had been shortened by fifteen to twenty minutes.
At the end of the day, this film is only interesting for fans of female martial arts films and might especially appeal to teenagers. More seasoned genre fans however simply can't overlook the film's numerous significant flaws. Karate Girl is overall passable for some relaxed entertainment on a lazy afternoon but fails to leave a significant mark. Ironically, the footage from behind the scenes during the credits and the music video coming along with the film show better quality than the movie itself.
This movie convinces on several levels. The atmospheric opening scene and multiple flashbacks are quite atmospheric, emotional and violent. The film's locations vary fluidly between beautiful settings and gloomy spaces. This tale of revenge doesn't offer any surprising twists but should appeal to fans of classic martial arts movies from the seventies and eighties in particular.
However, this release certainly isn't without its flaws. The acting performances are at times wooden, repetitive and predictable. The fight scenes lack authentic choreography and look at times unintentionally funny. The film suffers from rather slow pace and repetition and would have been much more efficient if it had been shortened by fifteen to twenty minutes.
At the end of the day, this film is only interesting for fans of female martial arts films and might especially appeal to teenagers. More seasoned genre fans however simply can't overlook the film's numerous significant flaws. Karate Girl is overall passable for some relaxed entertainment on a lazy afternoon but fails to leave a significant mark. Ironically, the footage from behind the scenes during the credits and the music video coming along with the film show better quality than the movie itself.
The worst part about being a Rina Takeda fan is that you will never find a movie properly showcasing her abilities, because nobody ever made one (and, by now, probably never will).
She's awesome. Very talented, and a great screen presence, which are the most important traits of an action star. But she just doesn't have any writers/directors/producers caring to capitalize on that. High Kick Girl was a nice if deeply flawed first effort. Fans were hoping Karate Girl would be the one to get it right, but it ended up being a huge step backward, as too were her subsequent films, but let's stay focused.
What is wrong with KG? Problem #1: not enough Rina! We want to see Rina taking up as much of her film as Jackie Chan takes up of his films. This was a noticeable problem in High Kick and even worse in KG.
Problem #2 is what KG fills the holes with: a lot of plot. Plot isn't inherently bad, but it is when it's so repetitive and boring. I don't know how many times I can listen to the bad guys have the same conversation. I don't know why they want me to try.
Problem #3 is her co-star, the fourteen-year-old Tatsuya Naka. For a fourteen-year-old, she's extremely talented. She has some remarkable acrobatic moves. But the issue is she reads as having impressive agility, not impressive force, and the movie asks us to believe in her force. We watch her incapacitate a room full of large, muscular adults by lightly kicking each of them once, and it just doesn't work. She should be in the movie, just not in this way, and not for this much screen time. The film treats her with the same importance as the person used to market the film, both on the cover and in the title!
A lot of martial arts films are enjoyable with fast forwarding (for example, High Kick Girl). KG is disappointing even then. It has a couple of good moments, and Rina does the best one could hope for with this material, but the final product simply isn't a good one, unfortunately.
If I had reviewed this when I first saw it in 2011, I'd end with "I can't wait for her third film-maybe they'll get it right next time!" But since I'm writing this after my 2018 rewatch, we already know how that one turned out.
She's awesome. Very talented, and a great screen presence, which are the most important traits of an action star. But she just doesn't have any writers/directors/producers caring to capitalize on that. High Kick Girl was a nice if deeply flawed first effort. Fans were hoping Karate Girl would be the one to get it right, but it ended up being a huge step backward, as too were her subsequent films, but let's stay focused.
What is wrong with KG? Problem #1: not enough Rina! We want to see Rina taking up as much of her film as Jackie Chan takes up of his films. This was a noticeable problem in High Kick and even worse in KG.
Problem #2 is what KG fills the holes with: a lot of plot. Plot isn't inherently bad, but it is when it's so repetitive and boring. I don't know how many times I can listen to the bad guys have the same conversation. I don't know why they want me to try.
Problem #3 is her co-star, the fourteen-year-old Tatsuya Naka. For a fourteen-year-old, she's extremely talented. She has some remarkable acrobatic moves. But the issue is she reads as having impressive agility, not impressive force, and the movie asks us to believe in her force. We watch her incapacitate a room full of large, muscular adults by lightly kicking each of them once, and it just doesn't work. She should be in the movie, just not in this way, and not for this much screen time. The film treats her with the same importance as the person used to market the film, both on the cover and in the title!
A lot of martial arts films are enjoyable with fast forwarding (for example, High Kick Girl). KG is disappointing even then. It has a couple of good moments, and Rina does the best one could hope for with this material, but the final product simply isn't a good one, unfortunately.
If I had reviewed this when I first saw it in 2011, I'd end with "I can't wait for her third film-maybe they'll get it right next time!" But since I'm writing this after my 2018 rewatch, we already know how that one turned out.
Did you know
- ConnectionsSpoofed in Girl Blood Sport (2019)
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- Karate Girl
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- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
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