A movie that doesn't even take 90 minutes, dragged and dragged for the first hour, dragged to death, and the plot was too thin. Donnie Yen obviously thinks movies are too simplistic. Movies must tell stories first. When your charm is not enough to surpass movies, it is best to tell the story honestly first, and then show other things. Donnie Yen obviously thinks that when the audience buys a ticket to watch my movie, they just watch my play, and nothing else matters. Yes, I can understand that action movies are weaker in literary drama, but for martial arts dramas, there is no action drama for an hour, and the last 20 minutes is attractive, and there are also 10 minutes of shooting scenes. This confuses me a lot about the positioning of this film, not like a well-planned work at all, but more like a second-rate commercial film shot in a hurry.
Let's talk about fighting. I admired Donnie Yen's fighting a lot before, but I was a little disappointed after watching this film. In this film, Donnie Yen brings out the MMA fighting he created to the fullest. This is a very useful fighting technique, but in the film, it is too worthless to appreciate. More is wrestling, more is fighting, less A point of speed and ferocity. Moreover, without Wu Jing and Sammo Hung's acting, how can I feel that Donnie Yen defeating his opponent is too easy, not enjoyable.
Playing Tony, his face is familiar, but he doesn't know his name. Coincidentally, on the day of watching this film, the TV station broadcast "The Matrix 3" and "Nine-Rank Sesame Official", and he actually showed his face. He is an underappreciated actor.
View more about Flash Point reviews