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Kung Fu Yoga
Two professors team up to locate a lost treasure and embark on an adventure that takes them from a Tibetan ice cave to Dubai, and to a mountain temple in India.
Release : | 2017 |
Rating : | 5.2 |
Studio : | China Film Co-Production Corporation, China Film Group Corporation, Huaxia Film Distribution, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Set Dresser, |
Cast : | Jackie Chan Aarif Rahman Zhang Yixing Miya Muqi Sonu Sood |
Genre : | Adventure Action Comedy Mystery Family |
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Reviews
Must See Movie...
It's hard to see any effort in the film. There's no comedy to speak of, no real drama and, worst of all.
There's no way I can possibly love it entirely but I just think its ridiculously bad, but enjoyable at the same time.
Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
Ever have a movie that you were just getting to the point of turning it off because of the complete lack of intrigue, or credible plot? This is that kind of movie, until the main character "borrows" an SUV from a rich arab in Dubai for a high speed chase and finds a lion is sitting the back seat.As Jackie Chan gets older, he tends to be embracing more projects that are family friendly, and are about preservation of culture. Aimed squarely at the Indo-Chinese family and early teen market, Kung Fu Yoga spends more time lecturing on preserving cultural history than telling a good story. There is a story there, not much of one, but it is there, loosely tied together by very simple connecting conversations as memorable as, "Hey we need to do X... Ok, go". Maybe it's lost in translation, but this is hard to believe when half of the movie is in english, while the other random half of the dialogue is in chinese.The plot follows that an ancient grudge over treasure ended in a mystery, and so a chinese archaeologist is hired to find it with his wonder skill - technology. They literally throw every cool camera gadget at you, drones, gopros, steady cams, wireless cameras etc... It's the youtube generation. Soon the cast is swept up in a 160 million dollar conspiracy to reclaim artifacts with a disputed ownership and a bad guy who's, kinda bad... but kinda nice... I mean, he's kinda a hunk.The production value isn't setting a very high bar, with poor acting, terrible script writing but there are the elaborate sets which are for stunted action performances that are more about showcasing cultural styles of fighting than actually following any reasonable progression. Curiously, the highest production value is found in a decent music video at the end of the film - which I actually recommend.Conclusion: With a poorly conceived plot, terrible writing and only a few jokes that didn't fall flat, this movie isn't going to make any memories for brilliant film making. Where it does work, is in its family-friendly, silly humour for young minds, and for its nod, albeit goofy nod, to the religious traditions of India.
Two professors team up to locate a lost treasure and embark on an adventure that takes them from a Tibetan ice cave to Dubai to a mountain temple in India. Gong fu yu jia is the 3rd film of 4th one i think film that Jackie Chan made this year and unfortunately it was as bad as i was expecting and even tho Chan tries his best both in the action part and the acting part the film tries to be so much like an Indiana Jones rip/off and it fails on all levels from acting, to characters to even as a movie on it's own. If you want to see a better Jackie Chan i'd recommend you to see The Foreigner it packed one of his best performances in more than 10 years. (0/10)
In an effort to locate an archaeological site of incredible historical significance, one professor from China named "Jack" (Jackie Chan) and another from India by the name of "Ashmita" (Disha Pitani) team up to combine their resources. However, the fact that this site also contains an incredible amount of treasure as well results in other parties following their every move in order to glean as much information as they can for their own ulterior purposes—and these people are willing to do whatever it takes to get their hands on it. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this film turned out to be rather disappointing for a number of reasons. For starters, I didn't care for the animation or computer graphics used on several of the action scenes. Likewise, the humor wasn't very sharp, the action itself was quite tedious and the script was just plain awful. As a matter of fact, about the only part of the movie that was any good was the ending which had a really good song and dance number. In short, while this might be entertaining for younger audiences, I didn't especially care for it and I have rated it accordingly. Below average.
"Kung Fu Yoga" is not one of Jackie Chan's best films. It's way better than "The Tuxedo" or "The Medallion," but not nearly as good as some of my favorites, such as "Mr. Nice Guy," "Who Am I?" or "Chinese Zodiac." I personally prefer his later big-budget productions over his earlier films. Jackie Chan is still amazing at 63 and doing stunts and spirited fight choreography. Jackie is older than Jet Li or Jean-Claude Van Damme, but he can handle action scenes much better than either of them and is still cranking out several movies a year. He's slowing down a bit and much of the action is handled by younger actors, including several females, and by various dangerous animals. There is more reliance on fighting with various stick-like objects, swords and firearms and a lengthy car chase involving super-exotic vehicles. The plot is a flimsy excuse for action sequences, sprinkled with random facts about ancient cultures and spiritual beliefs, with several romances that never quite make it into second gear and comments about social responsibilities. The final scene goes full-on Bollywood and is worth the price of admission. It makes no pretense of being cerebral. The plot couldn't be less Byzantine. The McGuffin and a few ideas are borrowed from the Indiana Jones films. However, the production values are solid it has an abundance of Jackie's trademark fight sequences, parkour and gymnastics. In fact, he displays several different fight styles in one sequence. For Jackie Chan fans, it is a credible addition to a distinguished body of work.