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5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
low budget, high aspiration, 20 April 2007
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Author:
(winner55) from United States
A Russian immigrant, Paul Marcos, becomes a drug dealer to survive.
After a heist he joins goes bad, he recovers from his wounds at a
Buddhist Temple. There he is taught Mantis style martial arts. But the
abbots at the monastery have a hidden agenda, one which forces Marcos
into confrontation with the mob that ruined the heist....
Here's the bad news - this is not an action movie.
It is a drama about one young man's spiritual journey through a world
of corruption. Not a martial arts film but a film about martial arts,
and how rigorous self-discipline and strict ethics comprise what kung
fu is really all about.
Here's the good news - despite a crash budget, Adolfo Swaya turns in a
remarkably good film. Strong script, surprisingly effective visuals,
excellent editing, rock solid acting despite some stereotyping, good
sound quality for a cheapie independent. And that's is what this is,
really - an independent film (a personal film, very carefully crafted),
not a 'kung fu' film. But I found it easy to watch and with a lesson to
learn. Rewards the patient viewer who can release genre expectations
and enjoy it for what it is
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