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Tekken 2

Original title: Tekken: A Man Called X
  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
2.8/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
Gary Daniels, Kane Kosugi, and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa in Tekken 2 (2014)
Trailer for Tekken: Kazuya's Revenge
Play trailer1:43
1 Video
99+ Photos
Martial ArtsAction

Suffering from amnesia, a young man trying to discover his true identity is kidnapped by an underground crime organization and turned into a ruthless assassin.Suffering from amnesia, a young man trying to discover his true identity is kidnapped by an underground crime organization and turned into a ruthless assassin.Suffering from amnesia, a young man trying to discover his true identity is kidnapped by an underground crime organization and turned into a ruthless assassin.

  • Director
    • Wych Kaosayananda
  • Writers
    • Nicole Jones-Dion
    • Steven Paul
  • Stars
    • Kane Kosugi
    • Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
    • Rade Serbedzija
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    2.8/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wych Kaosayananda
    • Writers
      • Nicole Jones-Dion
      • Steven Paul
    • Stars
      • Kane Kosugi
      • Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
      • Rade Serbedzija
    • 25User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Tekken: Kazuya's Revenge
    Trailer 1:43
    Tekken: Kazuya's Revenge

    Photos133

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Kane Kosugi
    Kane Kosugi
    • Kazuya
    Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
    Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
    • Heihachi
    Rade Serbedzija
    Rade Serbedzija
    • The Minister
    Gary Daniels
    Gary Daniels
    • Bryan Fury
    Kelly Wenham
    • Rhona Anders
    Paige Lindquist
    • Laura
    Charlotte Kirk
    Charlotte Kirk
    • Chloe
    Biljana Misic
    Biljana Misic
    • Natasha
    Sahajak Boonthanakit
    Sahajak Boonthanakit
    • The Janitor
    Ron Smoorenburg
    Ron Smoorenburg
    • Thorn
    Damian Mavis
    Damian Mavis
    • Swat Leader
    Russell Geoffrey Banks
    Russell Geoffrey Banks
    • Jimmy The Thief
    Eoin O'Brien
    Eoin O'Brien
    • Ezra
    Brahim Chab
    Brahim Chab
    • Rip
    • (as Brahim Achabbakhe)
    Abishek J. Bajaj
    Abishek J. Bajaj
    • Apartment Manager
    • Director
      • Wych Kaosayananda
    • Writers
      • Nicole Jones-Dion
      • Steven Paul
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    2.82.8K
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    Featured reviews

    3kosmasp

    Way to go ...

    As in: Maybe they should stop making Tekken movies and just concentrate on the games. Though I have to admit, I didn't connect this with the games at any point. Which is either a good thing (making it a unique story) or a bad thing (going too far away from the source material). Whatever the case, it's the viewer who has the last word on it. And some might wish they had amnesia after watching this.

    Seriously though: The fighting is pretty decent, though you do wonder how they get some people involved in movies like this. I guess everyone needs money after all. Gary Daniels makes more sense I reckon though, but the movie/script might have sounded better than the finished product after all. Because there are a few nice touches/ideas that almost shine through, but never seem to really capture the viewer ... there are worse movies out there, but there are far better ones too.
    4The_Phantom_Projectionist

    "You will get used to the noise"

    The fact that TEKKEN was not a perfect movie isn't shocking, but it is surprising how significantly worse its successor is. Director Wych Kaos is not exactly known for making great films and his video game movie does not bolster his reputation. KAZUYA'S REVENGE is not so much an adaptation as a lazy spin off, and though it does some things very well, its deficiencies are overwhelming and make this an unenjoyable outing for all but niche viewers.

    The story: Haunted by confusing memories, an amnesiac martial artist (Kane Kosugi) is kidnapped by a crime organization and turned into an assassin.

    The best thing that can be said about this movie is that Kane Kosugi is, at least, a much more apt choice for the lead role than Ian Anthony Dale was before him. A stellar performer just coming off one of the best fight scenes of the decade in NINJA II, Kosugi does what he does best in delivering fights that range from endurable to pretty good. The low number of characters from the series limits the dream matchups this one can present (and the one it does give us – Kosugi versus Gary "Bryan Fury" Daniels – is rubbish), but Kane manages some respectable bouts with genre regulars Ron Smoorenburg, Eoin O'Brien, and Brahim Achabbakhe. Karate fans won't be completely bored.

    Normally, my satisfaction for that regard would garner at least an average rating, but the movie is a metaphor for how a table cannot stand on only one leg. Aside from the fact that the plot in no way resembles the TEKKEN series and would probably make more sense without the label, the screenplay of KAZUYA'S REVENGE appears to have been written with a license to pad and instructions to only tell a fractional story... Many scenes are given over to time-killing flashbacks and montages of Kazuya aimlessly wandering around. The motivations of and relationships between characters are frustratingly enigmatic. Several times, Kazuya will enter a new locale, and with some unclear understanding known only to the characters, he will engage in an unprompted and unexplained fight scene. The movie ends without any resolution, clearly teasing another sequel that I hope will not see production – at least not under the same director.

    The upcoming reboot – THE KING OF THE IRON FIST TOURNAMENT - will constitute the third TEKKEN-inspired feature within a decade, and the fact that fans are a lot less happy about this than you'd assume says a lot about the missed opportunities of the series as a film franchise. The creative decisions this particular one makes are genuinely frustrating, and sends the impression that not only did the producers not care about representing the characters, they did not even care about telling a coherent story. Perhaps the politics of direct-to-video filmmaking are to blame, but no one ought feel compelled to sit through this.
    1jared-02224

    Worst video game based movie of all time not worth watching

    I've been a huge Tekken fan since I've played Tekken 2 the game and I fell in love with the story, however the first Tekken movie was bad enough but this one was complete garbage, Kazuya Mishima Heihachi Mishima and Bryan Fury were the only Tekken characters in the film and rest were made, I've seen many bad video game based movies but this one in oppion is by far the worst I've ever seen, no body on set has any clue what Tekken was about, don't watch it I'd rather watch Dragon Ball evolution than this, it opened my eyes to realize that Tekken was not meant to be a movie a Americanized, it's better to leave Tekken the way it's meant to be.
    2osman-a89

    Big Disappointment

    If you've seen the first Tekken movie - whether you liked it or not - and expect a similar content, you will be disappointed. This movie felt like a waste for over 90% of its runtime and comes nowhere near to the first Tekken movie.

    It seems like a low-budget movie. Don't get me wrong, there's nothing wrong with that, sometimes even the opposite. After finishing this movie it felt like I was stuck for ages in slow motion visions of the past. Half of the whole movie seemed to be filled with these probably due to alck of content, so try not to fall asleep if you take upon the challenge of watching it. Other than that there's a few good fight scenes (not the first ones) but way too few to make any difference and rescue the foreseeable and almost non-existent plot.

    Overall an anticlimactic experience, best suggested to be ignored or watched while being pre-occupied. If you like to get papers done, or study with some background-noise, this might be the right movie for you.
    3moviexclusive

    A terrible cash-grab attempt that will understandably outrage fans of 'Tekken'

    We do not blame you if you can't quite remember anything about the first 'Tekken' movie; like many of its ilk, it was a forgettable attempt at translating the Namco video game for the big screen. Given how cold a reception it had gotten, it's no surprise that this sequel is arriving with so little fanfare, given a theatrical release in some territories and dropped straight to video in many others. Not to worry though, if you haven't caught the first movie, this is an in-name only sequel, and in fact is meant as a prequel to its predecessor.

    Whereas the earlier film chose Jin Kazama as its protagonist, this one makes Kazuya Mishima its lead character. Fans of the game will know that Kazuya was only a good guy for the first instalment, thereafter turning into one of its main antagonists from the second one onwards. Fans will also know that Kazuya is in fact the son of Heihachi Mishima, the head honcho behind the infamous Iron Fist tournament of Tekken City where fighters from the eight mega-corporations ruling the world battle it out for survival and glory – and for those who are interested, the only continuity 'Tekken 2' has with the earlier film is that Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa returns, albeit for no more than a glorified cameo, as Heihachi.

    This is a story which ultimately culminates in Kazuya learning that he is the son of Heihachi, but before we get to that big reveal, writers Nicole Jones and Steven Paul introduce us to Kazuya as a man with superb fighting skills who wakes up one morning in a room not knowing who he is or where he comes from. As he tries to escape from a gang of heavily- armed militia, he is knocked unconscious and brought before a questionable character known as the Minister (Rade Serbedzija). Though he says that he is running a reformation school for 'sinners', the Minister turns out to be no saint himself, wanting Kazuya only to do his bidding by acting as his assassin for hire.

    Long story short (because there isn't much plot to begin with anyways), Kazuya discovers that the Minister isn't the man he says himself to be thanks to a former compatriot named Bryan Fury (Gary Daniels) who defected from the Minister's ranks and whom Kazuya was sent to kill. His only ally? Rhona Anders (Kelly Wenham), a British chick who tries to emote very hard in order to project a sense of conscience. Rhona who? Yeah, you're right. She isn't in the Tekken universe to begin with, nor for that matter is the Minister. There is a more interesting backstory here about how the film began as a project known as 'Agent X', and was only revealed later on as a Tekken prequel – hence the blatant use of character names which don't even belong to 'Tekken'.

    But perhaps the most disappointing element about 'Tekken 2' is that the action just doesn't cut it. Unlike 'Tekken', this origin story for Kazuya doesn't boast of any grand tournament to speak of, relegating the fights instead to the first act where he is made to show off his fighting skills in the Minister's training camp and in the third and last act where he confronts Bryan and later on comes face to face with his estranged father Heihachi. Unfortunately, the choreography is utterly disappointing for a movie which should thrive on its mano-a-mano fighting; there is no distinction in Kazuya's technique and for that matter between any of the fights to make them stand out against each other.

    What we get is a series of poorly edited shots (thankfully not shot in the jerky close-up style) stitched together with little sense of continuity between them. That is even more upsetting for fans of Kane Kosugi, whose role in 'Tekken 2' marks the first leading man break for the talented American martial artist of Japanese descent. Kosugi executes some beautiful moves, but they are lost amidst the unremarkable choreography and some dismal editing. It suffices to say that neither Kazuya nor his opponents get to express any sort of personality through their moves, and as a result none of the fights are actually memorable.

    The title alone may draw those who have played the game before and may be excited to see a real-life incarnation of their avatars, but not even nostalgia can rescue this abysmal martial arts-based movie which only bears the 'Tekken' name for familiarity and to ring up more coin. Indeed, 'Tekken 2' is an embarrassment to the 'Tekken' franchise and an outrage to fans of the game, so you'll be wise to avoid it whether in theatres or on home video.

    Related interests

    Bruce Lee in Opération Dragon (1973)
    Martial Arts
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    Action

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa and Gary Daniels reprise their roles from Tekken as Heihachi Mishima and Bryan Fury
    • Goofs
      The advertisements on the walls in the streets around Kazuya's apartment are in Thai while overview shots show flags in Japanese and the story is based in a Japanese city.
    • Connections
      Follows Tekken (2010)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Tekken: Kazuya's Revenge?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Tekken: Kazuya's Revenge
    • Production company
      • Good Times Production Co.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,240
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39:1

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