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Martial Art ArticlesThe film that launched little-known Muay Thai kickboxer Tony Jaa into orbit, Ben Johnson concedes that Ong Bak must be a contender for one of the best modern day martial arts films of recent times, even if the story does suck.


Ong Bak

Martial Arts DVD Review
Distributor: Contender Entertainment Group
Format: Region 2 (PAL)
Length: 105 min.
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audio: Thai, English (Dubbed)
Subtitles: English
Extras: Feature Length Commentary By Bey Logan; The Road To Glory Making Of Featurette; The Art Of Muay Thai Documentary; From Dust To Glory Interview With Tony Jaa; Ong Bak On Tour Promo; Deleted Scenes; Alternate Ending; Visible Secret; The Bodyguard Interview With Don Ferguson; Mad Dog Interview With David Ismalone; Pearl Harbour Interview With Erik Markus Sheutz; UK Promotional Trailer
Sound: DTS 5.1; Dolby Digital 5.1

Martial Edge Film Rating

Year of Release: 2003; Origin: Thailand; Studio: Sahamongkol Film Co.

Director: Prachya Pinkaew; Producer: Prachya Pinkaew, Sukanya Vongsthapat; Script: Suphachai Sittiaumponpan; Action Director: Panna Rittikrai, Tony Jaa; Cast Tony Jaa, Petchtai Wongkamlao, Pumwaree Yodkamol, Suchoa Pongvilai, Wannakit Siriput.

Alternative Titles: Daredevil; Ong-Bak: the Thai Warrior; Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior; Thai Fist

Trailer: Click below to view the trailer for Ong Bak

The most exciting Asian success of recent times is, surprisingly, of Thai origin – not the film, particularly (it’s a pottering drivel of a story), but rather the film’s leading actor, Panom Yeerum, or ‘Tony Jaa’ to us Westerners.

Perhaps one of the most remarkable finds in the evolution of modern martial arts cinema, Jaa resembles Jackie Chan in his stunt work, only with enough ferocity to make Steven Seagal look like a prancing mary.

Ong Bak is all about full contact Muay Thai kickboxing, and Tony Jaa is so remarkable to watch that he will quite literally leave you breathless: a chase scene through Thailand’s market streets sees the boy scale walls in a single leap, glide beneath moving automobiles and somersault through bustling traffic with split second precision.

And if you think that’s something, just wait until he starts beating people up. His knees and elbows can split through cycle helmets, and he performs wildly acrobatic kicks that defy gravity - even, in one scene, when his legs are on fire! The final brawl sees a succession of stuntmen line up as canon fodder for an exhilarating exhibition, which emphasises the movie’s selling point to such a degree that it beats any kind of wistful cynicism clean out of your brain.

The movie’s secret, and Tony Jaa’s, is the impressive lack of wire gimmickry, stunt doubles or computer generated nonsense, which is a rare thing in this new age of the instant kung fu hero. Ong Bak reclaims the genre by focusing on its bare essentials and emphatically embracing talent over trickery.

What Jaa also forces us to forget is a pitiful story line (another herald to the ‘golden age’) where he travels into the dark, criminal underbelly of Thailand to recover the stolen head of a sacred Buddhist statue. But in a movie this explicitly crowd pleasing, trivial issues like plot and characterisation are mere formalities. This movie kicks ass and should come with a band aid.

As for Tony Jaa, with a debut this strong, it remains to be seen how long he can resist the call from Planet Weinstein.

Ben Johnson is the Chief Editor of Martial Edge. He has worked for the website since 2005. Click on Ben's profile to find out more information




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Comments (1)
10-05-2008 11:09
Wow, just watched it for the first time today (been meaning to watch it for ages) 
Agree how the storyline isn't the best, but the ending was pretty good. 
Oh and so was the chase scene. 
Good Martial Arts as well, and thanks for the review :)
Written by Ninos Mayne (Registered)

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