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The raid 2 berandal opening
The raid 2 berandal opening







the raid 2 berandal opening

It may be missing the refreshing simplicity of The Raid, but The Raid 2: Berandal is a thrilling film that revives the visceral, tangible hand-on-hand tradition of action cinema. Some moments of reflective beauty demonstrate that Evans can go quiet when he needs to, and there's certainly no denying his ability to create memorable, distinctive characters. Part of this is a compliment to writer, editor, and director Gareth Evans’ ability to spin a sophisticated tale, but it’s also because the film occasionally gets lost in its own complexity. Some of the sequences are truly awe-inspiring, particularly a martial arts-filled car chase. The Raid 2: Berandal is an exponentially more complex film, where the ins and outs of the narrative may not be totally clear by the film’s end.

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If you're looking for a crime epic in the vein of Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather or Kinji Fukasaku's Battles Without Honour or Humanity, you might find it a fairly unoriginal exercise.īut if you're after an action film full of the visceral fight scenes that have been lacking in the recent spate of CGI spectacle, you'll get a lot of out this. Whether or not you like The Raid 2: Berandal will depend on which direction you're approaching it from. I'm not one to shy away from a complex plot, but it feels tonally wrong in this film, like someone crowbarred it in, amongst the scenes of actual crowbarring. The problem is that action films such as these are essentially delivery systems for the action sequences, and so the convolution in this film after the relative simplicity of The Raid is a bit jarring. The appeal of creating a story like Infernal Affairs (or, if you prefer, The Departed) is obvious, and there's certainly nothing wrong with Evans wanting to delve deeper into the world of gangs, corruption, loyalty, double-crosses and general intrigue. A bunch of cops making their way up a building, defeating nefarious figures, until they finally reach the big boss. Part of the joy of The Raid lies in its almost video game-like simplicity. In fact, this film was written before The Raid, and it was only later that writer/director Gareth Evans decided to create a link. Though it picks up immediately after the events of its predecessor, it tells a whole new story about criminals and corruption. That story does not actually continue in The Raid 2. In the end of that film, our lead, Rama, limps off, after encountering his estranged brother - one of the criminals! - in a tantalising promise of a story that would continue later. The film was a thrilling surprise, a fun and visceral action ride that we hadn't seen in some time. In 2011's The Raid, a squad of 20 elite police officers took on a tower block ruled by a crime lord, making their way up the 30 floors through a mixture of gunplay and extreme martial arts.









The raid 2 berandal opening