Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes assigns Sword of Vengeance a rating of 13% based on eight reviews. [12] Critics gave faint to fair praise to the fight scenes, and to Stanley Weber's performance, but found the film wanting otherwise, though acknowledging at the same time that the fighting sequences would be enjoyed by action film fans.
Shootfighter: Fight to the Death: Supercop (a.k.a. Police Story 3: Supercop) A Kid From Tibet: 1993: The Bride With White Hair [3] Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story: Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound: Hard Target: Iron Monkey [3] Kung Fu Cult Master: Kung Fu: Only the Strong: 1994: Drunken Master II (a.k.a. The Legend of Drunken Master) [3] Fist of ...
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 84% based on 166 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The site's critical consensus reads, " The Art of Self-Defense grapples compellingly with modern American masculinity and serves as an outstanding calling card for writer-director Riley Stearns."
The Empire Strikes Back (also known as Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back) is a 1980 American epic space opera film directed by Irvin Kershner from a screenplay by Leigh Brackett and Lawrence Kasdan, based on a story by George Lucas.
Eddie Cockrell of Variety gave the film a mixed review, saying, "The 5th Wave is an effectively decent post-apocalyptic, young adult, world-in-the-balance survival thriller" with an "arrestingly original spin on trendy genre tropes", although he suggested that fans of the book may have "issues with what has been edited".
To date, Lady Bird has a 99% rating with 401 positive reviews and four negative reviews. [8] Paddington 2 held a perfect rating from its release in 2017 until a film critic published a negative review in June 2021. To date, Paddington 2 has a 99% rating with 251 positive reviews and two negative reviews. [9]
The fight ended with Drazak's death. In the film Commando, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, there is a knife fight at the end of the movie between John Matrix (Arnold Schwarzenegger) and Bennett played by Vernon Wells. They begin with the knife, and then end up in a No-holds-barred CQC.
High On Films gave a positive review and wrote "Tom-Yum-Goong ranks amongst the finest exhibitions of martial arts in cinema, and is definitely worth a shot." [10] Combat sports and striking analyst Jack Slack has written that Tony Jaa's multiple attackers scene in the film is "the best fight in movie history". [11]