Tom Yum Goong 2 movie review
Tom Yum Goong 2 movie review
- Directed by Pracha Pinkaew
- Starring Tony Jaa, RZA, Marrese Crump, Rhatha Pho-ngam, Jeeja Yanin, Teerada
Kittisiriprasert, David Isamalone, Kazu Patrick Tang, Petchtai Wongkumlao
- Released in Thai cinemas on October 23, 2013; rated 15+
- Wise Kwai's rating: 3/5
- With an overly complicated plot, Tom-Yum-Goong 2, the much-anticipated
new action flick from martial-arts star Thatchakorn “Tony Jaa” Yeerum, has
turned out to be a rather bland concoction.
This is despite it being in
3D and pretty much non-stop action that crams in other martial-arts stars,
including Yanin “Jeeja” Vismistananda and America’s Marrese Crump, plus hip-hop
musician and kung-fu aficionado RZA and Thai singer-actress Rhatha “Yaya Ying”
Pho-ngam.
It's better than Jaa’s previous feature, Ong-Bak 3, but
is not as strong as his major studio breakout, 2003’s Ong-Bak and 2005’s
Tom-Yum-Goong, a.k.a. The Protector.
Even more
disappointing, it might possibly be the last Thai film Jaa makes.
Tom-Yum-Goong 2 comes out amidst a feud between Jaa and his studio,
Sahamongkol Film international, and its powerful boss, Somsak “Sia Jiang”
Techaratanaprasert. He is upset that Jaa is now working in Hollywood, making a
Fast and Furious sequel and teaching Vin Diesel Muay Thai.
The
first Tom-Yum-Goong took Jaa to Australia as he chased gangsters who’d
stolen his baby elephant. The relatively simple plot was an aim to broaden Jaa’s
international appeal, setting up fights for him around Sydney
landmarks.
Tom-Yum-Goong 2 stays in Thailand and again has Jaa’s
character Kham losing his elephant Khon. But it keeps the international flavor,
with such foreign fighters as Crump and RZA, plus David Ismalone (“Mad Dog” from
Ong-Bak) and Kazu Patrick Tang (Raging Phoenix).
The set-up
for the plot scripted by Ekkasith Thairath is labored, showing a snooze-worthy
montage of news headlines about a war in fictional far-away lands. For some
reason, Thailand is chosen as the location for the signing of a peace
treaty.
And somehow, this will involve Kham’s elephant being stolen by
the foreigner criminal mastermind portrayed by RZA. He leads a small army of
martial-arts warriors, each with a number tattoo to indicate how good they are.
Among them are the lethally brutal Number 2 (Crump) and the fierce Twenty
(Rhatha), whose tattoo is spelled out across her cleavage.
Thankfully,
it only takes 15 minutes or so for Kham to start running around, searching for
his elephant, which was initially taken by the crooked owner of an elephant
camp. But then that guy turns up dead, and Kham is standing over his body when
the man’s nieces show up – Jeeja and another actress, Teerada kittisiriprasert.
They are supposed to be twins, but apart from their pixie-bob hairstyles and
clothing, they look nothing alike. Still, it’s pretty confusing trying to follow
the Chocolate star Jeeja as she throws down against Jaa for the first
time.
Arriving with the twins is a motorcycle gang.
They chase Kham up a flight of stairs and onto a building’s roof. This is the
best fight sequence of the movie, with the noisy bikes whizzing all around as
Kham ducks and dodges them all with acrobatic ease. One smashes through a
skylight and the camera angle quickly shifts above it to catch the bike and
glass shards spiraling out of the screen in 3D.
More nifty camera work
comes from a point-of-view shot of Kham jumping from the roof to a balcony on
another building.
Kham eventually commandeers one of the bikes and leads
the hundreds motorcycling miscreants on a chase through alleys and down an
elevated motorway. He also takes a crazy ride on top of a drift-racing
car.
And too soon, with an oil tanker explosion, it’s all
over.
The action spills into a shipyard where Kham and the Pixie Sisters
get the hurt put on them by the imposing Number 2.
While Kham is pursued
by RZA’s gang of toughs, and is eventually captured and branded as No 1, he’s
also a fugitive from a squad of Interpol officers who include Kham’s old friend
from Sydney, Sergeant Mark (Petchthai “Mum Jokmok” Wongkamlao). I'm not sure why
he's in this movie, but he at least gets to voice what everyone is
thinking.
"Are you sure it's an elephant and not a kitten? Why do you
keep losing him?"
From the first encounter with Crump, the fights all
tend to blur together, taking place in such locations as dark warehouses and
subway tunnels. For the most part, they are framed too tightly and move too fast
to make any sense of.
One fun bit has Jaa and Crump fighting on an
electrified railway line. In a move that defies the laws of physics, they both
dip their feet in water and stand on the rails shocking each other. As their
fists swing they make the same sounds as lightsabers from Star
Wars.
Director Prachya Pinkaew and Jaa’s mentoring martial-arts guru
Panna Rittikrai clearly had a ball coming up with all kinds of ways to have
fists, feet, heads, elbows, weapons and elephant trunks zoom out of the screen
in 3D. Some effects work, some don't. Jeeja and her "sister" have some kind of
weird electric weapon they throw, but it's always hard to make out what it
is.
Despite everyone's best efforts, the fights in Tom-Yum-Goong 2
lack the sizzle and originality of their earlier efforts in Ong-Bak and
Tom-Yum-Goong.
On the plus side is Jaa, whose dour onscreen
demeanor seems to have softened with marriage, fatherhood and maturity. Compared
to his earlier films, he appears more at ease and natural. Perhaps Hollywood is
where he’ll create his happiest memories.
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