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IMDbPro

The Raid

Original title: Serbuan maut
  • 2011
  • 16
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
228K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,065
1
The Raid (2011)
A S.W.A.T. team becomes trapped in a tenement run by a ruthless mobster and his army of killers and thugs.
Play trailer2:00
20 Videos
67 Photos
Gun FuMartial ArtsOne-Person Army ActionPsychological ThrillerActionCrimeThriller

A S.W.A.T. team becomes trapped in a tenement run by a ruthless mobster and his army of killers and thugs.A S.W.A.T. team becomes trapped in a tenement run by a ruthless mobster and his army of killers and thugs.A S.W.A.T. team becomes trapped in a tenement run by a ruthless mobster and his army of killers and thugs.

  • Director
    • Gareth Evans
  • Writer
    • Gareth Evans
  • Stars
    • Iko Uwais
    • Ananda George
    • Ray Sahetapy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    228K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,065
    1
    • Director
      • Gareth Evans
    • Writer
      • Gareth Evans
    • Stars
      • Iko Uwais
      • Ananda George
      • Ray Sahetapy
    • 521User reviews
    • 497Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 23 nominations total

    Videos20

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Official Trailer
    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:06
    U.S. Version
    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:06
    U.S. Version
    International Version
    Trailer 1:51
    International Version
    "Preparation"
    Clip 0:53
    "Preparation"
    "Hallway Fight"
    Clip 1:48
    "Hallway Fight"
    "SWAT Approach"
    Clip 1:01
    "SWAT Approach"

    Photos67

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    Top Cast99+

    Edit
    Iko Uwais
    Iko Uwais
    • Rama
    Ananda George
    • Ari
    Ray Sahetapy
    Ray Sahetapy
    • Tama
    Joe Taslim
    Joe Taslim
    • Jaka
    Donny Alamsyah
    • Andi
    • (as Doni Alamsyah)
    Yayan Ruhian
    Yayan Ruhian
    • Mad Dog
    Pierre Gruno
    Pierre Gruno
    • Wahyu
    Tegar Satrya
    • Bowo
    Iyang Darmawan
    • Gofar
    • (as Iang Darmawan)
    Eka 'Piranha' Rahmadia
    • Dagu
    Verdi Solaiman
    Verdi Solaiman
    • Budi
    Alfridus Godfred
    Alfridus Godfred
    • Machete Gang #1
    Rully Santoso
    • Machete Gang #2
    Melkias Ronald Torobi
    • Machete Gang #3
    Johanes Tuname
    • Machete Gang #4
    Sofyan Alop
    • Machete Gang #5
    R. Iman Aji
    • Eko
    Yusuf Opilus
    • Alee
    • Director
      • Gareth Evans
    • Writer
      • Gareth Evans
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews521

    7.6228.3K
    1
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8Coolestmovies

    Just when you thought the book couldn't be rewritten . . .

    NOTE: Early, gushing reviews from TIFF Midnight Madness presentations should not generally be trusted, as many fest-goers are unable to separate the film from the experience, and formal critical consensus often sends most Midnight films into obscurity. Thankfully, THE RAID earns its stripes and deserves its praise, and stands firmly above the typically overeager reactions heaped on many other films screened in the Midnight program this year and in years past.

    • - - - - - - - - - - - - -


    In the future, when someone tells you a movie is wall-to-wall martial arts and gunplay, you should have no choice but to ask them how it rates against this picture, which has so much gunfire and brutal martial arts action -- all of it meticulously choreographed in ways more refreshing than I'd ever have thought possible in this world of peak-performance Donnie Yens and Tony Jaas -- that I very nearly lost the hearing in my right ear, in no small part thanks to the tendency of TIFF sluggos to mistake volume for quality when adjusting their sound levels in an aged, less-than--acoustically-ideal theatre.

    Star Iko Uwais is the real deal: wiry, lightning-fast and evidently the leader of a team of experts that truly takes martial arts choreography into new territory with this film (and, to a lesser extent, MERENTAU before it). If there's a downside to his inevitable celebrity because of this film, it's that Indonesian cinema in general will fare no better than Thai cinema has in the wake of Tony Jaa. Like Jaa, anything Uwais makes from this film on -- especially if he keeps teaming with writer-director Gareth Evans, as he should for at least a couple more pictures -- will gain instant and welcome interest from the west, while the rest of Indonesian cinema (such as it is!) will remain the domain of low-brow entertainment that caters largely to the locals, with the exception of the occasional horror movie that can be scooped up for exploitation by "Asian Extreme" DVD labels and streams in the U.S. and Europe.

    What really separates this picture from the hordes of martial arts films from the region is its heavy use of Silat, the native martial art of Indonesia. I've seen a billion martial arts pictures over the years, and a million "styles" to go with them, but I'll admit my knowledge of Silat was absolute zero, and this movie turned out to be a wonderful wakeup call.

    The key thing about Silat is that it involves knives, lots of 'em, and the film's heroes and villains deploy them with extreme prejudice for almost the entire duration. One stab won't do, but ten capped off by a throat slashing is a good way to gauge whether you've won the battle.

    By way of example, picture the exemplary alley-fight-with-sharp-weapons between Donnie Yen and Jackie Wu Jing in SPL (a personal favourite sequence). Now, double the speed (!), and make the ultimate goal to stab, slice or otherwise eviscerate your opponent into oblivion, and you've got most of the hand-to-hand combat in THE RAID. Hero cop Uwais has this neat little trick where he stabs a long blade deep into your upper thigh, then yanks it clean down to your kneecap. Ouch! This thing is bloody with a capital B, but it's so exceptionally well choreographed, photographed and edited that you never lose sight of the geography surrounding the combatants or feel like you've missed a single blow or puncture as each new pair (or group!) of fighters grinds each other down.

    Evans' editing in particular is a standout, and rather refreshingly, it isn't used to hide little bits of phony business or make the fight participants look more skilled than they really are, such as it often is in so many action pictures these days (both in western, and, sadly, many Asian cinemas; Legend of the Fist, I'm looking at you). Evans' performers know their stuff, and his editing does more showing than telling.

    As to the picture as a whole, if you thought the final 40 minutes of John Woo's HARD BOILED were collectively one of the greatest pieces of action cinema from anywhere ever, imagine that cinematic Nirvana expanded to feature length, and with virtually no fat. The movie starts with a team of elite cops attempting to covertly secure a maze-like high-rise slum apartment building run by a merciless drug lord (when we first meet him, he's executing five bound and gagged men in his office, but he runs out of bullets for the fifth guy, which causes him to casually grab a hammer out of his desk drawer . . . ). Within minutes, though, his goons -- who populate every floor of the building like cockroaches, fight like rabid dogs and spontaneously appear around every corner and out of every doorway -- turn the tables and wipe out most of the fleet in a monster battle of guns, fists, feet and the ubiquitous knives, trapping just a precious few of our heroes on the sixth and seventh floors with little hope of escape.

    Aside from a couple of quiet moments where allegiances on both sides of the field shift, not unexpectedly, that's pretty much it in terms of plot, and it obvious the filmmakers would have it no other way. This is a showcase, for Silat, for Indonesia and for Iko Uwais, who is very much the "next Tony Jaa" (as I'm sure he'll be labeled far and wide), for better and, somewhat regrettably, for worse in terms of his country's film industry, for he may very well come to single-handedly represent it around the globe. Not that I'm complaining after having been winded by such an audacious effort as THE RAID.

    Barry Prima who?
    9bebop987

    Possibly the best martial arts film I've seen

    After seeing the trailer, I knew I had to see this movie. Rarely our my high expectation met but The Raid surpassed it. If your seeing this movie, it's because you want to see action and The Raid hit every mark. The action is a mix of shootouts, hand to hand weapons, and mostly good ol' fashioned fists.

    The Raid proves again how far behind American action films are. I've seen other great foreign action films like Ong-Bak, The Protector, and Ip man but The Raid surpasses them by highlighting a martial art style not shown in any recent films. Its brutal and never lets up. It's not your typical ultra clean fighting that has been done to death but something that looks real and desperate at times as people try to survive outnumbered.

    Story wise it isn't anything great but at the same time it's better than most martial arts films due to interesting twists and being incredibly well paced to before you know it its over and you want more.

    If your a fan of action films, there isn't any better out there now or any even close in decades past.
    7kgprophet

    "Black Hawk Down" meets Asian Extreme Action

    Increasingly now, foreign filmmakers are making better Hollywood action movies than Hollywood is. In this case an English director who evidently now works in Indonesia seems to have mastered all the action story tenets despite this being only his 3rd feature film. Even more, the number of layers to this story parallels the number of floors in the apartment building that is at the centre of this film. All I could think of is how Hollywood will eventually commandeer this film and make a lifeless by-the-numbers knock-off that will only stain the original. And of course, the budget of the original is about the same as a Hollywood B-list movie actor's salary.

    This film is a disciple of the Asian extreme action genre, with over-the-top karate and acrobatics mixed with guns and violence. Betrayal isn't just a plot twist in these films, it's the first act. At least 5 or 6 betrayals are expected in these type of films where thieves betray other thieves, cops betray other cops, and honest guys get betrayed by best friends. What makes this film a standout is the unflinching action and well choreographed fight sequences by leads Yayan Ruhian and Iko Uwais. Early Jackie Chan movies got this kind of notice overseas because of their energy and gifted action instincts. Here, Gareth Evans is a one man powerhouse writer, director, and editor, masterminding this intricate chess match of good guys trapped on the sixth floor, with angry thugs coming up from the fifth floor and determined killers descending from the seventh floor. You feel our heroes feel trapped and vulnerable. Evans finds sources of tension from many places. The apartment building has tenants with unknown loyalties. The man heading the raid has unknown motives. Each character is well established with a minimum amount of screen time, keeping the action going.

    I was urged by a movie reviewer to see this film, describing it as one of the best action movies ever made. And you have to agree, this film, after providing a few minutes of backstory, takes off straight into the police raid of the apartment building filled with bad guys and a gang lord. Cinematography takes lessons from "Saving Private Ryan", using hand-held documentary style footage during firefights, and blasting the soundtrack with dozens of loud guns firing at once. The pulsing synthesiser score also hits with the punchy music stabs that propel the momentum as the police troops make their way up to the big bad guy on the top floor.

    Action sequences are creative and provide new angles and fight tactics that keep the hand-to-hand combat kinetic. Fans of the Bourne movies are encouraged to seek this out. (Not a coincidence that a Bourne Legacy trailer played before this showing). Many human moments also ground this film. An innocent man caught in the crossfire, gets asked to risk his life. A police squad leader who gets frustrated when the man conducting the raid puts his troops at risk. A child hired as lookout for the gang lord must die in order to prevent him from sounding the alarm.

    There is an intensity to this film that resembles scenes from "Black Hawk Down", with very intelligent setups for conflict, and innovative approaches to getting from point A to point B. This fresh drive, propelled by good guy Iko Uwais makes this 1 hour 40 minute film zip along with no time out to catch your breath. The fact this film is subtitled will prevent it from being a widespread hit, although it will no doubt have a long life on DVD. Instead, I expect director Gareth Evans to be directing movies with 150 times the budget of this small gem within a very short time.
    9ThomDerd

    Suspenseful, top-notch martial arts action film!

    This is a relentless and very impressive action/martial arts movie. The fight scenes are probably from the best ones I have ever seen and the understated performances of the protagonists fit perfectly here. I m wondering how did I miss this 10 years ago...probably because it's Indonesian! Written and directed by a Welsh guy -who discovered the Indonesian lead Iko- together with a tight editing and insane fight scenes (mostly Indonesian and some mixed martial arts) makes this a must to watch for fans of the martial arts genre and not only. If you want to stay bolted at your seat while watching an action film -and you don't mind of course the violence- then check this out. From the top 10 contemporary martial arts flicks out there, 9/10.
    8gregsrants

    Non-Stop Crowd Pleaser

    The Raid, a new non-stop cornucopia action film, comes from the most unlikely of sources – Indonesia. But don't let the country of origin fool you. The Raid is jam packed with some of the best action sequences we've seen in years and audiences are sure to walk away with an adrenaline rush punch to the gut that far exceeds their forked (over) entertainment dollar.

    Starring a bunch of actors we can guarantee you have never heard of and written and directed by Gareth Evans (another name you are surely not to recognize), The Raid offers big time action sequences chalked full of gunfights, knife fights and enough hand-to-hand combat to rival any movie in recent memory.

    The idea behind The Raid is remedial. A group of well armed police officers enter a 15-story apartment complex overflowing with a group of better armed drug dealers and bad guys intent on holding their ground. The police are lead by an over anxious Lieutenant who leads his squad of mostly rookies into the apartment complex where they are quickly over matched and out gunned. Their objective is to find the drug lord who resides on the 15th floor and bring him to justice. Easier said than done.

    Bodies on both sides of battle fall to the ground like rounds from a Gatling gun in an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie. The police – those that survived the opening shootout – are split into two groups with Jaka (Joe Taslim) fighting alongside the Lieutenant and a rookie officer, and Rama (Iko Uwais) who tries to protect an injured officer while battling the hordes of oncoming baddies.

    What ensues over the course of the next 80-minutes is a rip-roarin' blast of gratuitous bloodletting. The gun battles are more intense than the bank robbery scene in Michael Mann's Heat, the apartment hallway battles make the scene in Oldboy look like a Pixar film and the cops are as overmatched as U.S. Army Rangers were against an entire Somalian town Black Hawk Down.

    Director Gareth Evans clearly wants you to leave your brains at the door and celebrate in violent beatings and fight sequences that were stylishly choreographed and continue with such relentless regularity that you almost want to pause the projector to catch your breath before the next group of bare-fisted bruisers hit the screen. Our two main leads take more body blows than John McClane did in all four Die Hard films and their resilience and ability to be beaten to a pulp and yet have the ability and the strength to continue fighting is beyond this reviewer's comprehension.

    If there was but one small issue we had with the film it was that everyone who lived in the apartment complex had the fighting skills of an UFC righter or karate expert. Young, small, big or tall, they hall knew how to deliver a multiple high-kicks or at least take one and get right back up for more.

    There is a small twist in the film that is clearly evident a reel before the actual reveal on screen, but it hardly takes away from the fun filled excitement leading up to the plot turn.

    The sum of all its parts makes The Raid a must-see for anyone appreciative of non-stop battles where machetes are luxury and where a broken fluorescent tube can send a packed theatre into jubilant applause. It may lack the sophistication of The Departed, but it catered to an audience that couldn't get enough by the half-way mark and then was left gasping for air like a prized fighter in the 12th round towards its conclusion.

    www.killerreviews.com

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    Related interests

    Keanu Reeves in Matrix (1999)
    Gun Fu
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    Martial Arts
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    Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl (2014)
    Psychological Thriller
    Bruce Willis and Taniel in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Action
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Martial Art used in this movie by Rama (Iko Uwais) is Pencak Silat, the indigenous fighting style of Indonesia.
    • Goofs
      During the execution scene, when the all the rounds in the revolver are supposed to be spent it is placed on the shoulder of the final victim. At this point it's possible to see into two of the chambers, where the tips of unspent ammunition are visible.

      But since only two men had been shot, the implication is that the munition is bad, which also explains why for the last one a hammer is used.
    • Quotes

      Mad Dog: Pulling a trigger is like ordering a takeout.

    • Alternate versions
      The original Indonesian release features a score by Aria Prayogi and Fajar Yuskemal. The international release features a new score by Mike Shinoda and Joseph Trapanese. This version was given a limited re-release in Indonesia on May 16, 2012.
    • Connections
      Featured in Maltin on Movies: Wrath of the Titans (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Razors Out
      Written by Mike Shinoda and Chino Moreno

      Performed by Chino Moreno

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    FAQ22

    • How long is The Raid: Redemption?Powered by Alexa
    • Is it better to watch this movie dubbed or in subtitles? How good is the dubbed version of the movie?
    • What are the differences between the International Version and the Indonesian Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 20, 2012 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Indonesia
      • France
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Blog
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • Indonesian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Le commando
    • Filming locations
      • Indonesia(Jakarta)
    • Production companies
      • Pt. Merantau Films
      • Stage 6 Films
      • Celluloid Dreams
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,100,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,105,187
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $213,785
      • Mar 25, 2012
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,146,689
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Datasat
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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