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Seagal... hmmm... you could argue that he brought something new at the time. A style of martial arts different to anything joe public had seen before, which transferred fairly well to the screen (if you like that sort of thing). And he's also a chef.


But as with Van-Damme, the lack of acting ability and highly limited repertoire were exposed pretty quickly, and they became parodies of themselves after a couple of films.


It's strange how both Seagal and Van Damme keep going... churning out low-budget straight-to-DVD movies long after their star has fallen. Seagal in particular looks like he couldn't punch his way out of a paper bag before running out of breath.

Is there a sub genre of martial arts/action films heavy in terms of references from Bruce Lee and the Low Budget Hong Kong Cinema from the 1970s. I think one strand has come back strongly in the Korean flicks. The heist movies are also a sub set but action properly speaking is like Die Hard, Con Air. Its a 1980s thing the blow em up with big guns. With changing notions of masculinity the genre has also changed and you have Fast and the Furious, Miami Vice etc, man and machine as opposed to Arnold and Bruce Willis, brute stength and guns and explosions that's why enemy of the state is so interesting because it crosses thriller/action genre rather than the raw actions.


Anyway.. must dash

What bugs me is how everyone these days, particularly post Bourne, is supposed to be a bloody martial arts expert. Can you imagine Michael Caine, as Harry Palmer, attempting a roundhouse kick? Angelina Jolie, who can't be much more than 8st dripping wet, kicking huge blokes across the room in Salt, just looked daft.

maxxi Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Very true - The Ong-Bak films and Warrior King

> (Tom-Yum-Goong) are huuugely entertaining for

> anyone reared on Big Boss, Fist of Fury etc.


* smacks forehead * ... those films are Thai, not Korean.

Talking of Korean films, I'm wondering whether war films are a subset of action flicks, ort whether it entirely depends on the film.


It's Brotherhood that brings it to mind. Huge action set pieces, although the pitch of the film quickly rises to lunatic and never relents.

I'm reminded of Sam Pekinaph too, action? Not sure. Again, generally lunatic though.


But then I guess you have much more contemplative approaches to war films such as The Thin Red Line.

I'm wondering when the definitive World War 1 film is going to be made which truly depicts the horror and brutality of the trenches? Something along the lines of a 'Saving Private Ryan' for the Somme. I heard somewhere that Birdsong is being turned into a movie.

On the subject of Korean films, one very strange but very good martial arts film I once saw was called 'Old Boy'. Some very tough fight scenes and a rather gross live octopus eating scene that turns the stomach.

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