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These are incredibly familiar, but they work better than those found in most HK offerings. There are also the "necessary" comic moments as well, including some bedroom hi-jinks, as well as an amusing (and thankfully short-lived) interlude where romantic misunderstandings abound. Though nothing particularly original, the action set pieces involving gunfights, swordplay and multiple explosions are numerous, engaging, and energetic relying on wires, stuntmen, and a good measure of suspension of disbelief. Better still, the pacing is surprisingly steady even through the slower moments (give or take a few exceptions).
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Indiana Jones series it tries to emulate (including its own Temple ofĭoom-styled musical number), the film is filled with cliffhanger moments akin to the old serials, including impossible escapes.
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In fact, the movie is less a recreation of 1930's China than it is a fantasy world of lawless bandits and diabolical military men, co-existing with spies, ninjas and martial arts masters. Produced and co-directed by Tsui HarkĬhina), the film shows his fingerprints all over the screen: above average production values, high on entertainment, humor, and crowd-pleasing moments, and filled with epic-like Hollywood sequences inventively done on a low-budget. Review: Based on a popular Asian comic series, The Raid offers up a great deal of fun for those in the mood for some Hong Kong mayhem. Plot: During the 1930's time of turmoil, a rag tag team of people led by a retired healer join China's revolutionary army to stop the forces of the dethroned emperor and his Japanese allies from unleashing a deadly poison gas upon his enemies. Starring: Dean Shek, Tony Leung, Jacky Cheung

Rabid is more interesting than the usual living-dead fare and for fans of horror it's an interesting outing. And let's not forget the gratuitous amount of nudity and ample amounts of required gore, of course. There's also a great sense of dread throughout, and Cronenberg shows his growing mastery of the medium, from the direction of the cast, to the more refined camera shots, to the better general flow of the film compared to his earlier Not that it's badly done the whole exercise looks slicker than most pictures of the genre, the rabid killers go on an appropriately violent rampage, and the martial law in Montreal is well depicted (with body disposal crews in biohazard gear roam the streets in garbage trucks!). Though never adequately explained, porn-star Chambers plays a modern-day medical vampire who has the ability to suck blood from (and infect) her victims through an vagina-like orifice in her armpit! Unfortunately, what starts off as another bizarre, twisted film unfortunately veers into familiar zombie-movie territory mid-way through. ( Dead Ringers, Videodrome) usual themes pop up again, adding more sexually deviantīizarreness and stabs at the medical profession. Review: Though the plot of Rabid is almost non-existent, director / writer Cronenberg's
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Plot: After a horrible accident, a woman is given an experimental skin graft leaving her with a craving for human blood that unleashes a plague that turns people into mindless killers. Starring: Marilyn Chambers, Frank Moore, Joe Silver
