After premiering in the Midnight Madness lineup of the Toronto International Film Festival last fall, the dazzling martial arts symposium The Furious is ready to blow the minds of the masses. Thanks to the John Wick series, which is also distributed by Lionsgate, general audiences have become acclimated to intricate and sophisticated fight scenes directly inspired by Hong Kong and Indonesian action cinema. It’s perhaps unfair to regard the Keanu Reeves vehicles as a “good start”, as they’re strong entries in their own right, but if the Wicks are the warm-up, The Furious is the full workout. Not only does the film feature the year’s finest combat choreography but unless you’ve been lucky enough to catch anniversary screenings of Ong-Bak or The Raid, it features what may be the most relentless hand-to-hand you’ve ever seen in a theater.
After a blistering cold open marked by spectacular splits and scorpion kicks, The Furious settles on single father Wang Wei (Xie Miao) and his daughter Rainy (Yang Enyou) living together in modern-day Bangkok. While at the barber one day, the two get into an argument and when Rainy storms out to the street, she’s lured away and kidnapped by criminals posing as garbagemen. The local police offer no help when Wang Wei seeks assistance, forcing him to take matters into his own hands (and feet) as he chases down his daughter’s captors. Teaming up with Navin (Joe Taslim), an undercover journalist investigating the same trafficking ring that claimed his wife, Wang Wei will stop at nothing to infiltrate the powerful network of lethal gangsters responsible for snatching Rainy.
From the perspective of story and dialogue, the latter of which is primarily in English, The Furious has very little you haven’t seen before in action movies either from the United States or originating outside the US. The actors all do what they need to do to establish the stakes: in the case of Xie Miao and Yang Enyou, selling the early moments of bonding and in the case of Joey Iwanaga, who plays big baddie Pak Lung, selling his villain’s despicableness. Despite the lack of character depth, director Kenji Tanigaki manages to conjure up memorable quirks to disperse among the stock combatants. Fans of martial arts films will likely recognize genre mainstays Yayan Ruhian and Brian Le, the former of whom sports a maroon tracksuit while wielding a bow and arrow and the latter of whom rocks overalls while refusing to die. When his unconscious thug wakes up after taking a sledgehammer hit to the head and wanders through the woods, I half-expected to hear a “ki-ki-ki, ma-ma-ma” to indicate a Jason Voorhees-brand of immortality.
Despite the generic title, The Furious appropriately sports a relentless, fast-and-furious pace, commencing with Wang blazing down Bangkok streets barefoot, chasing down a garbage truck with Rainy and her abductors onboard. Most modern martial arts outings would be lucky to have 1 or 2 sequences as thrilling and unforgettable as just about all the setpieces gathered here. One such scene, set at an ice factory where one of the villains freezes insubordinates in large blocks of ice, hammers out a dizzying array of hits and blows with jaw-dropping ferocity. Even in settings familiar, like a furtive nightclub where dirty deals go down, there’s a supplemental element like an octagonal MMA enclosure upon which Kenji Tanigaki and his team can stage acrobatic and elaborate action. By the time Wang and Navin make it to the crime syndicate’s packed headquarters, fittingly called the Snake Pit, the comparisons to The Raid feel both inevitable and earned.
The entire pan-Asian cast of The Furious is eminently gifted when it comes to delivering bone-crunching realism in their hand-to-hand conflicts but Xie Miao is a particular standout in his most prominent role yet. Co-starring in productions with legends like Jet Li and Chow Yun-fat in the mid-90s, he hasn’t had a lead performance capable of catapulting him to that next level until now. There’s an inertia to his fighting style that’s riveting and infectious but even more thrilling may be the split-second interruptions in his rhythm by way of pump fakes with either fists or feet. Whether he has more starring roles in the tank or not, this movie is an outstanding showcase for his tenacious physicality and will no doubt inspire on-screen martial artists down the road.
Score – 4/5
More new movies coming to theaters this weekend:
Disclosure Day, starring Emily Blunt and Josh O’Connor, follows a targeted whistleblower as she unravels a massive government conspiracy and races against time to bring about an extraordinary event that will change human history forever.
Stop! That! Train!, starring Ginger Minj and Jujubee, involves two train stewardesses who must work with the snooty first-class crew of the new luxury passenger train upon which they’re working to prevent a disaster in the midst of a massive storm.
Jinsei, starring Ayumu Nakajima and Eri Kamataki, is an anime feature about a man who becomes a J-pop idol, an outcast, a leader and an oracle in a 100-year chronicle spanning the past, present and future.