IMDb RATING
6.3/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
A model prisoner's leave ends in tragedy when his past resurfaces, forcing him to flee. He starts over in Thailand, until a local criminal coerces him back into crime. After this man attacks... Read allA model prisoner's leave ends in tragedy when his past resurfaces, forcing him to flee. He starts over in Thailand, until a local criminal coerces him back into crime. After this man attacks his family, he vows revenge.A model prisoner's leave ends in tragedy when his past resurfaces, forcing him to flee. He starts over in Thailand, until a local criminal coerces him back into crime. After this man attacks his family, he vows revenge.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Chananticha Chaipa
- Dara
- (as Chananticha Tang-Kwa)
Simon Kook
- Houng-Say
- (as Sarut Khanwilai)
Gigi Velicitat
- Client maison Kasem
- (as Jean-Jacques Velicitat)
Featured reviews
Mayhem!, efficiently directed by Xavier Gens is violent, melancholy and features two extendedly-bloody fight sequences. Unfortunately, Mayhem makes the cardinal sin of making you wait almost an hour for any of the fight choreography promised in the trailer to appear. The Mayhem part of the movie really only applies to the last 35 minutes. Thankfully, the fight choreography is punchy, bloody, violent, and framed in a way that will make anyone who's watched The Raid movies smile. The question is, does the roughly 45-50 minutes it takes to get to the goods worth it? Sort of. The story is simple, clichéd and has quite the melancholic ending. The fighting makes up about 20 or so minutes of the movie and for a 100 minute movie titled Mayhem, it's not enough.
HOWEVER, if you can relax and make it through you will enjoy what Gens and his stunt team put together. The final hallway fight into a gory melee in an elevator is stunning. It's the in your face brutality promised by the movies title and I had to watch it multiple times to revel in its glory. If only the pacing was tightened up Mayhem could have been up there with the greats. Until then, it's a fine Sunday afternoon watch if you don't have anything else to do.
HOWEVER, if you can relax and make it through you will enjoy what Gens and his stunt team put together. The final hallway fight into a gory melee in an elevator is stunning. It's the in your face brutality promised by the movies title and I had to watch it multiple times to revel in its glory. If only the pacing was tightened up Mayhem could have been up there with the greats. Until then, it's a fine Sunday afternoon watch if you don't have anything else to do.
I had waited months for this to come be available in North America. I had high expectations given the episodes from Gangs of London and Frontieres. The last 20 mins was well choreographed and as violent as I would have expected the rest of the movie to be, in the end felt like some missed opportunities to ratchet up the action. Some of the locations were amazing. Overall worth it fro the elevator scene! The story felt way too dramatic when in reality it was a cookie cutter revenge story. Not sure about the lead actor - he was good in the action scenes but the dramatic parts were too drawn out.
The movie looked to me like a modern approach to a 90's scenario, which isn't something bad, I am just noticing it - one goes on a straight revenge over the bad guys.
We don't get to know the full story of Sam, but it's seems he is the typical French of non-French origin - involved in gang life. However, he decides to leave it, but as it's well known - you can't leave it if it doesn't leave you. So even in his attempt, unwillingly, he still stays a criminal which he never stops being - even after restarting everything in Thailand, the first big thing he wants to achieve in life, he tries it the criminal way, which brought all the consequences it could - one reckless decision.
The actor performs very good in the fighting scenes, they are a slight copy of the series of martial arts and raw violence movies from Indonesia (The Raid, The Raid 2, The Night Comes for us, Headshot etc.) which is fine, but is kind of obvious.
The acting is good, the music and the camera are fine. The Thai atmosphere is well recreated. It's overall a simple movie, but well-made and in case you have nothing better to watch or just need some good fighting one "Farang" ("Mayhem!") is worth it.
We don't get to know the full story of Sam, but it's seems he is the typical French of non-French origin - involved in gang life. However, he decides to leave it, but as it's well known - you can't leave it if it doesn't leave you. So even in his attempt, unwillingly, he still stays a criminal which he never stops being - even after restarting everything in Thailand, the first big thing he wants to achieve in life, he tries it the criminal way, which brought all the consequences it could - one reckless decision.
The actor performs very good in the fighting scenes, they are a slight copy of the series of martial arts and raw violence movies from Indonesia (The Raid, The Raid 2, The Night Comes for us, Headshot etc.) which is fine, but is kind of obvious.
The acting is good, the music and the camera are fine. The Thai atmosphere is well recreated. It's overall a simple movie, but well-made and in case you have nothing better to watch or just need some good fighting one "Farang" ("Mayhem!") is worth it.
Let's get straight to the point. The fight scenes in this movie are amazing, some of the best I've seen. And I've seen a lot. I am well-versed on the artistry of movie fight scenes. This is about as clear and hard-hitting as they come.
You can see everything. You can feel the hits. You almost experience the pain felt by these characters. My jaw dropped repeatedly. And there are a bunch of cool shots and camera movements during the fights.
As for the rest of the movie, there really isn't much there. It's the most bare-bones revenge plot we've seen a thousand times. Technical aspects are more than fine, but there isn't much to latch onto.
You could argue the same about GOAT action movie The Raid: Redemption. The difference is, The Raid doesn't focus on that bare-bones story. 70% of the movie is action scenes. It's more like 10% in this movie. Action is scarce until the climax and most of the focus is on the uninteresting story.
My personal recommendation: watch only the hallway/elevator scene at the end.
(1 viewing, 1/15/2024)
You can see everything. You can feel the hits. You almost experience the pain felt by these characters. My jaw dropped repeatedly. And there are a bunch of cool shots and camera movements during the fights.
As for the rest of the movie, there really isn't much there. It's the most bare-bones revenge plot we've seen a thousand times. Technical aspects are more than fine, but there isn't much to latch onto.
You could argue the same about GOAT action movie The Raid: Redemption. The difference is, The Raid doesn't focus on that bare-bones story. 70% of the movie is action scenes. It's more like 10% in this movie. Action is scarce until the climax and most of the focus is on the uninteresting story.
My personal recommendation: watch only the hallway/elevator scene at the end.
(1 viewing, 1/15/2024)
The European problem is not really a European problem. And one of these problems as an embodied problem solver, difficult fare? Had I considered this film choice carefully?
France, the country of origin, is probably at the top of the Lost Countries, bearing the rotten fruits of its dirty-golden years like no other nation. Fortunately, despite the bitterness, a change of scenery. Thailand. A little martial arts, even more idyllic holiday atmosphere. Everything could be fine now, but unfortunately the cobbler sticks to his last. Prototype: it has to be a lot very quickly, with as little effort as possible. So let's say impatience is in this blood, only evil tongues speak of criminal energy.
Enough negative energy, after the first quarter we get to see a real action pearl, a dramatic 90s Van Damme story build-up, which then leads to a 2010s The Raid-style battle. Yes, the finale is the same as always with these films, but it's somehow essential fan service. Comparisons with the current "Sixty Minutes" are legitimate, but France can do it better than Germany, wild Bangkok versus overrated Berlin is also self-explanatory, and so are learned martial arts skills versus martial arts history. However, it's nice that films like this still exist.
France, the country of origin, is probably at the top of the Lost Countries, bearing the rotten fruits of its dirty-golden years like no other nation. Fortunately, despite the bitterness, a change of scenery. Thailand. A little martial arts, even more idyllic holiday atmosphere. Everything could be fine now, but unfortunately the cobbler sticks to his last. Prototype: it has to be a lot very quickly, with as little effort as possible. So let's say impatience is in this blood, only evil tongues speak of criminal energy.
Enough negative energy, after the first quarter we get to see a real action pearl, a dramatic 90s Van Damme story build-up, which then leads to a 2010s The Raid-style battle. Yes, the finale is the same as always with these films, but it's somehow essential fan service. Comparisons with the current "Sixty Minutes" are legitimate, but France can do it better than Germany, wild Bangkok versus overrated Berlin is also self-explanatory, and so are learned martial arts skills versus martial arts history. However, it's nice that films like this still exist.
Did you know
- TriviaFarang is a Thai word of Persian origin meaning a stranger of Western/European origin.
- How long is Mayhem!?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €4,920,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $8,510
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $6,001
- Jan 7, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $1,574,136
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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