VENGEANCE OF AN ASSASSIN (ตัวอย่าง เร็วทะลุเร็ว)
Director : Panna RittikraiCast : Dan Chupong, Wat-Nantuwat Boonrupsup, May-Nisachon Tuamsoongnern, Nui-Kessarin Akethawatkul, Chatchapol Kulsiriwuttichat, Kovit Wattankul
Genre : Action
Run Time : 99 mins
Opens : 1 January 2015
Rating : M18 (Violence)
Vengeance is a dish best served cold – and apparently,
with a heaping serving of Muay Thai
madness on the side. In this action flick, Nathee (Chupong) is driven by the
most original of motivations: the search for the truth behind the death of his
mother and father. Nathee and his younger brother Thann (Boonrupsup) work at an
auto shop run by their uncle Norm (Ping Lampraplearng). Norm is intent on
shielding his nephews from the tragic circumstances that led to their parents’
death, knowing danger will not be far behind should Nathee and Thann plan on
enacting vengeance. Nathee goes about training himself in weapons skills and
martial arts and takes on the assignment to be a bodyguard to Ploy
(Tuamsoongnern), the young niece of an influential politician. He gets caught
up in an assassination plot masterminded by criminal Chai (Kovit Wattankul) and
Thann and Uncle Norm quickly become embroiled in this life-or-death situation, Nathee
calling upon his various deadly skills to avenge the death of his parents.
Vengeance of an Assassin is the final
film from director Panna Rittikrai, who died shortly before the movie’s
release. Rittikrai is a well-respected filmmaker and action choreographer who
mentored Thai cinema’s biggest action star export, Tony Jaa. B-movie
aficionados and dyed-in-the-wool fans of gloriously schlocky action flicks from
the 70s and 80s won’t find anything of that sort coming out of Hollywood today –
even direct-to-DVD movies are often dull and grim. It turns out that they need
look no further than Thai action movies to get their fix – Vengeance of an Assassin is a cheese-fest that had this reviewer
howling with laughter from start to finish. The movie begins smack dab in the
middle of a combative soccer match that involves explosives and hot coals. This
oddity of an action sequence has no bearing on the plot whatsoever and it seems
it’s only included because director Rittikrai just thought it was that good of
an idea. Later on, a character is impaled through the chest with a steel pipe,
but survives because the pipe “missed his dangerous parts”.
Let’s
be honest, foreign action flicks are sometimes more exciting than Hollywood
ones because there don’t seem to be as many union-mandated safety restrictions
and because the stunt performers seem to actively embrace risking life and limb
in the name of frivolous entertainment. Rittikrai’s regular posse of stuntmen
well and truly live up to the name “Daredevil Stunt Team” and the production
notes boast that they sustain “real injuries” in the name of delivering
authentic fights and falls. Lead actor Diew-Choopong Changprung a.k.a. Dan
Chupong started out as a member of this team and hit the big time after
starring in Rittikrai’s 2004 Muay Thai movie
Born To Fight. He’s skilled, intense
and athletic and the biggest plus is that being his own stuntman, there’s no
need to cut around the fight scenes to disguise a double. The boyishly charming
Wat-Nantuwat Boonrupsup complements Chupong well and director Rittikrai waited
until Boonrupsup turned 20 to give him a major supporting role.
Unfortunately,
because of how good the fighting, fireballs, bullet hits and other physical
gags look onscreen, the hastily knocked-together CGI footage is all the more
disappointing. Perhaps the poor visual effects work is part of the goofy charm
associated with movies of this genre, but that doesn’t make it any less jarring
when during a skirmish on the roof of a moving train, the actors are surrounded
with fuzzy outlines because they weren’t properly composited into the
background. A flatly unconvincing digital helicopter soon joins the chase. There’s
also the matter of severe mood whiplash – there’s tomfoolery from the comic
relief and straight-up executions literally within seconds of each other. Then
there are the over-the-top histrionics, with people bawling as others die in
their arms, set to maudlin piano music.
Vengeance of an Assassin is impossible
to take seriously but if you grew up on the low-budget 80s action movies of
Cannon Films and similar studios, it is possible to enjoy. The characters in
this film include a merciless, hilariously vampy femme fatale (Nui-Kessarin
Akethawatkul) and an octogenarian RPG-firing Chinese doctor (Ooi Teik Huat). With
the most threadbare of plots and as silly as its title is unwieldy, Vengeance of an Assassin is nonetheless
a rather captivating brand of silly.
Summary: Director Panna Rittikrai’s swansong is dumb,
ridiculous and unintentionally funny but packs in plenty of appeal for die-hard
genre fans who long for some of the crazy, violent, bloody, balls-out action
mainstream Hollywood releases seem to mostly lack.
RATING: 3 out of 5
Stars
Jedd Jong
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