Archive for the ‘Chocolate’ Category

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Chocolate Movie Streaming

Dimanche, juillet 11th, 2010
Chocolate Movie Streaming. Chocolate Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Chocolate
Average customer review:

Chocolate is available for streaming or downloading.

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Chocolate is the perfect “acid test” to decide who are fans of action movies and who are not. How so? Let me define. A suitable fan of action movies has the ability to overlook some flaws in film-making (e.g., script, acting, character development, etc.) if the action sequences are exceptional enough to create up for them. This is no different from fans of art-house dramas who can overlook minimal instruct if the film can describe everyday life in attractive ways. With that said, Chocolate is one of the best examples of an action movie that has such unbelievable fight sequences that they easily overpower any deficiencies in the script.

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An autistic girl with martial arts skill attempts to accept on the debts of her sick mother. This movie is not well written, and requires some patience from the viewer to slug through the early moments. Once the 30 miniature sign arrives, however, the viewer is treated to one of the most improbable displays of asskicking by a female protagonist in the history of action cinema. Virtually all of the remaining 50 minutes is devoted to high quality choreography and bone-crunching maneuvers. The settings and scenarios change frequently, thereby avoiding any feel of repetition or monotony. This is brainless action at its very finest. JeeJa Yanin - an fantastic specimen with her fluid moves and hard strikes - catapults herself into the upper echelon of female action stars with this single movie. Her punches and kicks open off rather basic, but earn increasingly more complex until they peak during the jaw-dropping finale that lasts a whopping 20 minutes. Lots of fun to be had here.

Now, a snobby moviegoer will bawl about the negatives without even considering the positives. Anyone who does not relish the action in this movie seriously needs to collect their pulse checked, or at least schedule for a re-alignment of their action movie tastes. There’s nothing more scintillating than watching a cute girl kick the living hell out of hundreds (quite literally) of stuntmen in a variety of environments. Basically, if you’re not entertained by this, you’re not a fan of action movies. (You probably didn’t like So End or Azumi either, upright? ) Conclude fooling yourself and go behold another Tsai Ming-liang film.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Chocolate! Click Here

Some critics have claimed that this movie “ripped off” other movies. It didn’t. There are a few homages that last a few minutes at most (a few Bruce Lee references, a locker scene reminiscent of Jackie Chan, and some footage from Tony Jaa’s movies) . These few scenes are only a descend in the bucket, because 95% of the action is independent of any references to other movies. The sign-post battle on the apartment complex balconies is one glaring example of a completely new (and breathtaking) sequence that pays homage to no one but itself.

This is definitely worth a blind recall. Accurate fans of martial arts mayhem will waste up re-watching the action scenes about a thousand times.

Ever since the international successes of Prachya Pinkaew`s “Ong-Bak” and “Tom Yum Goong” with Tony Jaa, the U.S. has been flooded by a lot of action films from Thailand. Most recently, are Jaa’s mediocre earliest films such as “Battle Warrior” and “Involving Killer” impartial to capitalize on the Muay Thai magic in movies. Prachya Pinkaew, now returns with a martial arts film that will be categorized in the “girls who kick butt” genre; “CHOCOLATE” is a film rotund of hard-hitting fights and improbable stunts. Newcomer Jeeja Yanin (sometimes credited as Yanin Vismitananda) has the skills to be dubbed the “female Tony Jaa”–after all, it is distinguished easier to instruct a martial artist to act than to disclose an actor to do martial arts.

An autistic teenager named Zen (Jeeja Yanin) is a child born of an affair between a top-ranking Yakuza officer named Masashi (Abe Hiroshi) and a Thai woman (who was also a mistress of a Thai crime lord) named Zin (sparkling Ammara Siripong) . The Thai gang boss (played by Pongpat Wachirabunjong) doesn’t indulge in the fact that the Yakuza is muscling into his turf and Masashi was forced to return to Japan and Zin is left to raise Zen by herself. Growing up, Zen discovers that she has an uncanny photographic memory, and she can imitate complex martial arts moves by watching the students in the Muay Thai school next door and by watching Tony Jaa and Bruce Lee’s films.

As fate would have it, Zin becomes stricken with cancer and she needs money to pay for her medical needs. Aided by childhood friend, Moom (Taphon Phopwandee) they intend to capitalize on her lickety-split reflexes and unbelievable agility in a sidewalk point to and by collecting debts that a lot of folks owe her mother. Limited do they know that the past is closing in on them and it will lead to a final resolution to the events that led to her birth.

Martial Arts films usually have a simple status and “Chocolate” (labeled after Zen’s well-liked vice) is no different. The problems with the film is that the space may be a cramped overreaching and seems a cramped humorous. A lot of its elements are underdeveloped and the script is a itsy-bitsy scattered. The film’s main premise of an autistic teenager with unbelievable fighting skills requires a very titanic suspension of disbelief; I don’t care how obedient your reflexes are or if you have a photographic memory, one can learn the moves but one cannot fully accumulate the fighting “savvy” or the experience of rolling or taking a punch. The film gets a diminutive absurd, the villains are a bit comical; the Thai Boss’ second in tell is a transsexual with his enjoy gang of transsexuals. I consider the position would have done better without these elements, that it should have developed its more human side with a lot of emotion since it does have the potential to do so.

The plot’s hollow storyline aside, “Chocolate” is a visual mayhem of violence. Zen’s opponents go from easy to medium, from hard to “VERY HARD”–it’s almost like a video game. Jeeja has the primary skills and I was very impressed with her athletic abilities. For a film like this, the action scenes need to be able to rob the expose, and it does. The film is a stunt note, the fights are long and hard-hitting, they also derive more violent as the film progresses; it displays Jeeja’s martial arts skills to efficiency. Highlights include a very nifty meat market battle and the film’s showstopper, the very stunt-ridden fights on the side of a building. Jeeja performed most of her stunts without wires, with absolutely NO stunt doubles and with this, I am very impressed. With the film’s raze credits, you’ll survey her retain very loyal injuries when performing some of the stunts. Jeeja’s performance acting-wise is decent for a newcomer, but it is determined that she needs to wait on a few acting workshops.

The director also gives subtle tributes to Bruce Lee classics such as “The Huge Boss” (the ice factory scene) and “Fist of Fury”. There is also a cold entertaining “dream” sequence very similar to “Party 7″ (which may also be a hint of Ruin Bill? ) . There is also a very exclusive, quirky assassin who uses the Brazilian martial art Capoeira, who also wears a negative-colored track suit (Dim suit with white stripes) as a tribute to Bruce Lee’s “Game of Death”. The near-climactic encounter also occurs in a setting very similar to “End Bill”, and I found it very attractive as to why Thai mobsters would utilize samurai swords.

Despite all the very cold fisticuffs, the film’s murky tones, the film does seem a exiguous too hollow. The film became overly ambitious, it’s as if it couldn’t determine whether to be dramatic or silly. However, I do hope to watch more of Jeeja Yanin, she may not be as charismatic as Michelle Yeoh or Cynthia Khan, but hey, the actress is unexcited young and she’s mild developing. The film may not be as bone-crushing as “Ong-Bak” or “Flashpoint”; “Chocolate” isn’t as impressive as the best of Bruce Lee, Jet Li or Jackie Chan action films, but it is a satisfying enough martial arts film. The film is simply a stunt point to, made to showcase Jeeja’s incredible skills and fortitude–now, if she unbiased goes to an acting workshop, she’ll be awesome!

Recommended for action junkies and a splendid rental for everybody else. [3 ½ -Stars]

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