En arrivant à Hong Kong, une Américaine est battue et agressée par des voyous. Elle est prise en charge par un maître d'arts martiaux qui l'entraîne à une formidable compétition de combat connue sous le nom de Kumite.
Bande-annonce
Casting
Amy Johnston
Jane
Muriel Hofmann
Shu
Kathy Wu
Wai
Jenny Wu
Ling
Jet Tranter
Cassidy
Mayling Ng
Svietta
Sunny Coelst
Jaa
Rosemary Vandebrouck
Yara
Lisa Cheng
Lam
Chalinene Bassinah
Alia
Lauren Rhoden
Van
Lisa Henderson
Natalya
Isa Sofa Chan Kwan Nga
Kim
Nathalie Ng
Aung
Happy Ma
Kazumi
Xiao Xia
Wong
Wing-Hin Ho
Chow
Mon Choi
Lau
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Commentaires
10 commentaires
The film opens with two women fighting in the Kumite (Ku-ma-ta) in Hong Kong to a draw. One is in black and the other in white showing off some simple Yin-Yang. The woman in black refuses to split the prize so the two fighters are to train someone for the 435th event five years later. We see various street tough girls around the world get invitations and then we see Jane (Amy Johnston) a PBR drinking waitress harassed by rude customers. Who else in the world is tougher? She leaves her waitress job and takes her skills to Hong Kong to compete. Okay, she has some formal training and an ulterior motive which we discover later as an attempt to create a plot outside of women beating each other up. After all, who wants to just watch cat fights? In Hong Kong we see the woman in black train the Hong Kong version of Harley Quinn (Muriel Hofmann). Jane, our Barbie doll, trains with the woman in white, who she once refers to as Mrs. Miyagi. Yes there are gross similarities to "The Karate Kid." The training period which makes up so many fight films showing unorthodox training techniques that figure in later on, was relatively brief . The film has some ties to real life. In the film Jane was trained by her father, Amy was trained by her father David Johnston. Amy was also a stunt double in "Suicide Squad" and is Scarlett Johansson's stunt double. Mayling Ng, martial arts fighter and bikini contestant is also in the film. There are a lot of hard bodies in locker room scenes in various stages of dress. Blood and killing. Guide: F-word. No sex or nudity.
Sometimes more is less. - oh, and spoilers. This movie borrows from a number of movies before it. Bloodsport - the Kumate is the most obvious one, but the training sequences are reminiscent of kickboxer. In the end, the movie doesn't make much sense. Two women fight a match all day long (not very likely) and it ends in a tie. Because one of them refuses to share the prize money, they have to find students and train them and the student who wins will determine which lady wins - are you still following me? Yeah, it's already thin. One lady is set up as the "good" martial artist. She talks to spirits and she believes that a woman will show up, sweep her garden and be her champion, but it seems she gets impatient, so she gets someone to send people up to her place to sweep. The other lady, the "bad" martial artist has people training in a dojo trying to find her champion and she finds one in a thief who defeats the best lady in her dojo. She then trains the thief, telling her pearls of wisdom like "no mercy". Meanwhile, the blond lady in the picture and star of the show comes to Hong Kong to fight in the tournament - where her father fought and disapeard many hears ago. Her purse gets stolen and the fights, but loses to 4 street thugs. The good martial artist comes to her rescue, takes her in and is surprised to see that she's the one who sweeps her garden to return the favor of the martial artists kindness. Some disagreements ensue and some very well choreographed training, including a tai-chi like dance in the shallow water. Parts of this movie are very nice. I liked the training sequences with the good martial artist and the lead of the movie, and some of the fight sequences were quite good. The first fight in the kumate was the best It thought with the tai-kwon-do fighter. Bits of the fight scenes were unnecessary, like the fights with weapons and making the black boxer look overmatched seemed particularly unnecessary. There were also two villians - the lady who was trained by the "bad" martial artist and a Russian lady who took pleasure in breaking her opponants in the ring, killing at least one of them, badly injuring another. It was necessary to have two villians because that way, one was defeated and the other was turned back to good - like star wars. Got all that? Oh, and her dead father shows up as a ghost and the movie was all tied together with million dollar bets and the bad guy confessing that he killed the leads father and the good martial artist's husband, who was the bad martial artists brother? Got all that? Yes, the ending of this movie was a hot mess of how many plots can we borrow and put into one film, but despite all that, the beginning of the film felt like a throwback to 80s martial arts films and it was pleasantly watchable and some of the fight choreography was really quite good. Not a complete waste of time and enjoyable enough in places, but try to ignore the plot as it only makes the movie worse. If you rent it just to see lady's fighting, it's worth a look. Not the best, but not bad.
With Elisha Cuthbert looks, mediocre acting abilities and fair martial arts skills Amy Johnston does the best with what little was handed to her. The plot was a terrible rehash. The characters' motivations were laughable. The fight scenes were good to tragic. When a fighter is taught to always'finish' the attack why do they stand there like big time wrestlers. Why must the heroine always have to make a miraculous comeback after terrific beatings? When told "I killed your father" the reaction is, "Now I can avenge my father by winning the Kumite"... Seriously? Better editing of the fight scenes was needed, a writer was needed, a decent story line was needed... but they had a discount on blood capsules. It had potential but Amy, they let you down.
