
The story of a young Thai man Ah Jin who traveled from Thailand to Australia alone for his own elephant, fought all the way through, and finally overthrew the villain and won the victory.
The front of the film is relatively dull and boring, impatiently estimated that it will soon fork, I just want to see the elephants, only to stick to it.
Until the elephant was taken away by the gang, the story officially entered the main line, and the plot became more and more exciting, this wonderful is not to say how good the plot is, in fact, it is an old routine, and the movies of every country in the world have basically been used. When I say wonderful, I mean Tony Ja's skills and play.
Toni Jia's ability is reflected in this full sense of a shot to the end, can end the 720-degree slalom kick never side kick, can be super must kill never spend fist embroidery legs, can fly double never singles. All kinds of handles are fancy and full of arcade flavor.
The fighting scene is quite forced, vaguely seeing Bruce Lee's tone of the year, Jackie Chan's small range of juggling, many places I even laughed out. If you really start a fight, it must be "one courage, two strengths and three efforts".
And Tony Ja was stabbed first, and after picking out dozens of minions, he could also break four or five big men who could break the stone lions with their bare hands and throw the elephants out like chain balls, so surprised that my jaws could not be closed. When the Master Brother of the Broken Water Flow came, he couldn't win the battle. Compared with the cutting and stinging of the cold weapon in "The Raid", the blood-stained horror, Tom Yin Gong more embodies strength and various jutsu, such as jumping higher than Jordan's knees, kicking you out of the strong four or five meters away, the joint jiu-jitsu that the soldiers come to block, twisting your hands, feet and feet to where they should not exist, showing another style of boxing.
Just at first it looks fresh, fighting this thing is too focused on tricks to become WWE, you just have to watch how Tony Ja kneaded this pile of people into noodles, wrapped in dumplings....