Wednesday, May 8, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

'The Raid 2' - packed with classic visuals, but mindless

Troy Ribeiro Darpan, 30 May, 2014 02:29 PM
  • 'The Raid 2' - packed with classic visuals, but mindless
Cast: Iko Uwais, Arifin Putra, Tio Pakusodewo and Alex Abbad
 
Director: Gareth Evans
 
Rating: **
 
"The Raid 2" is an Indonesian martial arts action porn, treated in noir style. It takes off from where it left in the 2011 released "The Raid". Presented through an undercover policeman's point of view, it is a convoluted crime saga designed in a Godfather-style father-son crime drama with a whole sub-set of assassin characters who have their own storylines and sequences.
 
Set in the underworld, crime-infested Jakarta, Rama (Iko Uwais) the rookie cop in "The Raid" is sent undercover as Yuda to a prison so that he can befriend Uco (Arifin Putra) the son of a crime lord and then rat out the whole setup; to root-out the real threat of political corruption in Jakarta.
 
 
Rama does this to avenge his brother's death and to protect his family from being eliminated.
 
The plot plays on the basic theme of the monkey and the two cats fighting for the cheese they find. Inter-gang rivalry based on ethnic background between the local crime boss Bangun (Tio Pakusodewo) and the Japanese boss Goto (Ken'ichi Endo) is flared by the Arab boss Bejo (Alex Abbad) who instigates Uco to ignite the flames of conflict.
 
Rama fights on because he can and because he must. In the process, he is subjected to so many double-crosses that it's a wonder he knows who he's fighting any more.
 
The cast includes both veteran and fresh faces from the Indonesian film industry who deliver convincingly.
 
The scenes are packed with gory dramatic statements oscillating between loud violent action and pin drop suspense filled vacuum between urban and rural settings.
 
Writer-director-editor Gareth Evans may be considered as a trendsetter who offers set action pieces with artistic flare. The way his shots and sequences are designed and executed onscreen is remarkable. The in-prison battle in wet mud slush, the street fights, the terror caused by the hammer wielding dumb and deaf girl in the metro along with a boy brandishing a metal baseball bat in an industrial estate and the sword and gun fights in the speeding automobile - each piece excels the previous set.
 
 
Loaded with shades of grey, visually, the camera frames are taut and astonishing. What's more? It captures action is claustrophobic space, with top angle shots especially when over fifteen goons pile up in a toilet cubicle in the prison or when Rama is fighting in the car.
 
What adds to the effect of the gruesome blood curdling carnage is the effective background score and prosthetic make-up that makes you squirm in your seat.
 
But what makes this entire viewing experience a farce is the director's careless eye for detailing. His action structure persists in lining up his goons and sending them in single file to be thrashed by the protagonist makes for amateur action choreography. Also in another sequence during the mayhem in Bangun's office when Bejo and his men barge in, Bangun's secretary is noticed seated calmly at her table, totally oblivious and unaffected by the action around.
 
 
Also the mismatched lip sync in the English dubbing can be a distraction initially.
 
Overall, this film is for those who are into mindless bloody gore and crazy action.

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

X-Men: Days of Future Past lacks 'X' factor

X-Men: Days of Future Past lacks 'X' factor
Overall, with nearly 25 characters to track, fleeting between time zones, space and technically brilliant visuals, concentrating on the film becomes a tedious affair.

X-Men: Days of Future Past lacks 'X' factor

Heropanti is a one-time watch

Heropanti is a one-time watch
"Heropanti" is a full-on 'paisa vasool' Sajid Nadiadwala entertainer. It doesn't quite measure up to the requirements of the theme of honour killing that it so valiantly puts forward. But as a masala entertainer, that has more to say than one would expect from a film of this nature, "Heropanti" gets its fundas right.

Heropanti is a one-time watch

Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film

Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film
"Kochadaiiyaan" as a Rajinikanth film has all the elements to satisfy his fans but as an animated feature, which is used making motion capture technology, fails to live up to the expectations of all those who watch a Rajinikanth film just for the sake of entertainment

Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film

Godzilla's Technical Brilliance Overshadows Monster

Godzilla's Technical Brilliance Overshadows Monster
Giftwrapped in an emotional father-son and family bonding story that hooks you on the sensitivity graph, "Godzilla" doesn't give anybody time to be endearing or sarcastic or human in any way. It is a conundrum of a techno-thriller and a fabled nightmare put together.

Godzilla's Technical Brilliance Overshadows Monster

Children Of War is masterpiece on ravages of war

Children Of War is masterpiece on ravages of war
In one of the many mind-numbing images in this exceptionally vivid work on the ravages of war, the back of a truck is jolted open and out tumble a bunch of women one on top of another at a Pakistani prison camp for Bangladeshi women run by a despicable tyrant, who could be the Nazi mass murderer Ralph Fiennes in Steven Spielberg's "Schindler's List".

Children Of War is masterpiece on ravages of war

The Xpose - At last, an intelligent Bollywood whodunit

The Xpose - At last, an intelligent Bollywood whodunit
 Yup, there is no business like show business. This whodunit means business. The suspense drama is bright, bouncy,believable and entertaining.

The Xpose - At last, an intelligent Bollywood whodunit

PrevNext