After the son foils an attempt to steal a priceless Thai artifact, the family becomes national heroes and the target of revenge by the criminal gang whose robbery they stopped.After the son foils an attempt to steal a priceless Thai artifact, the family becomes national heroes and the target of revenge by the criminal gang whose robbery they stopped.After the son foils an attempt to steal a priceless Thai artifact, the family becomes national heroes and the target of revenge by the criminal gang whose robbery they stopped.
JeeJa Yanin
- Wawa
- (as Jija Yanin Mitananda)
Tae-joo Na
- Tae Yang
- (as Taejoo)
Sumret Muengput
- X
- (as Sumret Muangput)
Brahim Chab
- French Taekwondo Champion
- (as Brahim Achabbakhe)
Thana Srisuke
- Security Guard
- (as Thana Srisuk)
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10pdqpaul
This movie has all the elements, action, comedy, suspense, I absolutely love this movie
From the director of Ong-bak, The Protector and Chocolate comes this Thai/Korean co-production. A family of taekwondo instructors living in Bangkok foils a group of smugglers after they steal a priceless Thai artifact. The gangsters target the family and turn the tables on them, forcing them to steal back the artifact. JeeJa Yanin (of Chocolate fame) shows up about forty minutes into the film and helps the family kick butt. She's as awesome as ever. The teenage son of the family (I think the actor's name is Kyung-suk Kim) is an awesome martial artist - in the film he does a combination of taekwondo and hip-hop dancing, looking kind of similar to capoeira. I'd love to see this kid star in more movies, perhaps more of them with JeeJa. The action is often awesome in this flick, though I could have done without all the CGI (in particular the awful CGI crocodiles). This film never showed up in Region 1, though it's been on the internet for a couple of years (as have subtitles).
Moon is a Taekwondo master migrates from South Korea to Thailand with his five family members.
One day, Moon's family encounters a group of treasure thieves on the street, and are soon involved in a fight with them. With their impressive martial art skills, Moon's family is able to defeat the thieves and take back the stolen treasure. Pom, the leader of the gang, is the only one to escape and threatens revenge.
Moon's family becomes more popular in the public eye, not knowing when or where Pom will get his revenge.
The actions scenes are top-notch as always you see in any Prachya Pinkaew film. However, this lacks in the story and screenplay part. The comic relief is an advantage amongst the fast paced punches and kicks. Special mention to Tae-joo Na (Tae Yang), Kyung-suk Kim (Tae Mi ) and Jeeja Yamin (Wawa from Chocolate -2008, she has already impressed with her martial arts skills).
It really creates havoc when comes to fights and will keep up you engaged if you really love these kinds of films.
You need to watch it to the credits and you will know the real hard work of these actors.
Recommended for all action lovers. My Vote 6/10
One day, Moon's family encounters a group of treasure thieves on the street, and are soon involved in a fight with them. With their impressive martial art skills, Moon's family is able to defeat the thieves and take back the stolen treasure. Pom, the leader of the gang, is the only one to escape and threatens revenge.
Moon's family becomes more popular in the public eye, not knowing when or where Pom will get his revenge.
The actions scenes are top-notch as always you see in any Prachya Pinkaew film. However, this lacks in the story and screenplay part. The comic relief is an advantage amongst the fast paced punches and kicks. Special mention to Tae-joo Na (Tae Yang), Kyung-suk Kim (Tae Mi ) and Jeeja Yamin (Wawa from Chocolate -2008, she has already impressed with her martial arts skills).
It really creates havoc when comes to fights and will keep up you engaged if you really love these kinds of films.
You need to watch it to the credits and you will know the real hard work of these actors.
Recommended for all action lovers. My Vote 6/10
The title says it all. Or better said, all the positive aspects. The script is just too silly. The family makes decisions that endanger themselves and the youngest kid all the time and whenever things go their way, it's just due to plot armor. Don't even bother with any dialog, just skip from one fight scene to the next. Oh, except for the kitchen fight scene; skip that one. I came back to this review to lower one star because of that scene.
Sadly, THE KICK is another Thai martial arts film that ends up disappointing rather than exhilarating. Don't get me wrong, I love and adore the first quartet of these Thai films I watched: ONG BAK, BORN TO FIGHT, WARRIOR KING, and CHOCOLATE are all fantastic little films that I can happily watch over and over again. But everything else that has come since has been a disappointment.
Even with ONG BAK director Prachya Pinkaew on board, and martial arts choreography from old timer Panna Rittikrai, THE KICK is an underwhelming film. There's a storyline about the hunt for a priceless and ancient kris (a type of eastern dagger) but the main narrative is bogged down by the antics of an unlikeable Korean Taekwondo team who really drag things down. The reason for their inclusion is that this film was part funded by South Korea, who obviously wanted a slice of Muay Thai for themselves.
The problem with this is that we get the likes of Tae-joo Na occupying most of the screen time. This Korean actor's acting is poor and his martial arts is little better, and the bit where he does a hip hop dance to beat up the villains is a huge embarrassment. At least the reliable Petchtai Wongkamlao (THE BODYGUARD) is on hand to bring some laughs, and the fantastic JeeJa Yanin (CHOCOLATE) stars in support as another fighter. But they really should have focused the story on Yanin alone and concentrated on doing great choreography and extensive fight scenes and then this would have been something special instead of weak and generic.
Even with ONG BAK director Prachya Pinkaew on board, and martial arts choreography from old timer Panna Rittikrai, THE KICK is an underwhelming film. There's a storyline about the hunt for a priceless and ancient kris (a type of eastern dagger) but the main narrative is bogged down by the antics of an unlikeable Korean Taekwondo team who really drag things down. The reason for their inclusion is that this film was part funded by South Korea, who obviously wanted a slice of Muay Thai for themselves.
The problem with this is that we get the likes of Tae-joo Na occupying most of the screen time. This Korean actor's acting is poor and his martial arts is little better, and the bit where he does a hip hop dance to beat up the villains is a huge embarrassment. At least the reliable Petchtai Wongkamlao (THE BODYGUARD) is on hand to bring some laughs, and the fantastic JeeJa Yanin (CHOCOLATE) stars in support as another fighter. But they really should have focused the story on Yanin alone and concentrated on doing great choreography and extensive fight scenes and then this would have been something special instead of weak and generic.
Did you know
- SoundtracksRun to the World
Performed by ZE:A
- How long is The Kick?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $3,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $517,069
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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