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Survival is no game.
Im Jahr 2039 haben die Weltkriege die Menschheit nahezu ausgelöscht. Die Kontinente werden nicht mehr von Regierungen, sondern von mächtigen Konzernen wie dem Mishima Zaibatsu geleitet. Dessen Boss, Heihachi Mishima, ist Veranstalter von Tekken. Der größte Kampfsportwettbewerb soll die Massen bei Laune halten und verspricht dem Sieger ewige Anerkennung. Auch der rebellische Street Fighter Jin Kazama möchte daran teilnehmen. Seine Motivation: Blutige Rache an Heihachi, den er für den Tod seiner Mutter verantwortlich macht. Geplagt von seinen inneren Dämonen, bestreitet Jin das King of Iron Fist Tournament. Im Verlauf des Turniers offenbart sich ihm dabei die dunkle Seite des Mishima-Imperiums und er entdeckt ein geheimes Projekt, welches die Welt für immer verändern könnte.
Avis de la communauté (7)
To the best of my recollection, I never played the video game so I'm only grading this on its merits as a movie, not as a big-screen adaptation of the game. That being said, I can only give this a "Meh" rating because it basically sucked except for the fight scenes...and it took forever to get to those. The whole backstory was a major yawner and did very little - well, actually NOTHING - to make me buy into the characters or the whole "revenge" thing. I didn't learn anything interesting about the Jin character, and even less about his mother, his history, the Anvil, the Tekken corporation, etc. Well, wait...I take that back: the first 10 seconds of the movie, the narration explains **EVERYTHING**... right? This not-very-entertaining film was reminiscent of Jean Claude van Damme's _Lionheart_ which is one of my favorite movies of all times...for the fight scenes. I swear, if I could find a collage of JUST the _Lionheart_ fight scenes, back-to-back-to-back, I could watch those over and over....and _Tekken_ was very similar: the fight scenes were kickass, but the rest of the movie just frankly blew chunks. I enjoyed seeing Luke Goss again, after recently watching all the _Death Race_ films but he fell a bit short in his role; one minute he's got a British accent, the next he sounds like a street thug from any decent-sized city in the USA. And like all the others, you got this whisper of a backstory about his character but absolutely nothing to make you feel any attachment. Bottom line: this is a good movie **for the fight scenes** but don't expect anything beyond that. Do yourself a favor and skip ahead to right at the 20:00 mark (okay, you could maybe add 30 seconds and start at the 19:30 mark but it wouldn't add anything except another 30 seconds) and you'll be right at the beginning of the fight scenes. Nothing to get excited about (in the first fight, that is) but you can shave off 20 useless minutes. Seriously. There are no fight scenes in the first 20 minutes, and the lighting is so bad it's hard to follow what little IS going down. I repeat: _Watch this ONLY for the fight scenes._ Don't say I didn't warn you...
An ok fighting movie but the name Tekken and being able to use the characters costumes and names really carries it. If it weren't for those things my rating would probably be a 5. The costumes were pretty good but although they looked the part, most of the actors didn't really give the characters justice. Marshall Law was way too aggressive and not as lighthearted as he is in the games. Like cmon he's not a cage fighter for the Mishima's he owns a restaurant. But of course we want to see the iconic fighting moves! We want to see some electric wind god fists, we want to see some wave dashing and hell sweeps....nope. The only people who actually fought like the actual character were Eddy Gordo and Bryan Fury. The rest of the cast you would see maybe a little hint of the character but for the most part it was just regular martial arts. And yeah Tekken like most fighting games the story isn't super coherent and it can be all over the place but the movie has it all messed up. [spoiler] Kazuya should not be working with Heihachi and he's not even half demon like he is in the game. [/spoiler] I'll give it one thing though, it's way better than the Tekken anime movie that's for sure.
Disappointing, heavily disappointing. Feels like a low-budget cosplay of a legendary fighting game, and sadly the soul never makes the jump. The world looks cheap, the lore is stripped down to bare bones, and the action lacks the impact fans expect. Jon Foo tries, but the writing gives him nothing iconic to work with, and most characters feel like hollow versions of their game counterparts. A few fight scenes are serviceable, but the film misses the brutality, style and mythology that define Tekken. More forgettable than fun.
okay this movie takes a lot of liberties with the story of the games and it is definitely a bit slow and stale in the beginning once the main character has his motivation and gets into the tournament the movie definitely becomes much more enjoyable there is some great action some great interactions between the fighters in between matches a decent story about revolution and revenge mixed in The constant flashbacks of the main character's mother teaching him some random move as a child that he immediately then uses to defeat the enemy is really quite annoying it's done way too much and it takes you out of the moment What overall this was a fun entertaining action movie
How in the world is this rated so low......? I don't know anything about a game called tekken like the other reviews seem to, but this a good movie! Jon Foo really does his role well. He comes across as innocent, masculine, sexy, strong, and tough. The fight scenes are good without being over done. I enjoyed it.