After what felt like an eternity, Tony Jaa left the confines
of his murky cave to deliver a follow up to break out movie Ong Bak. It's worth
mentioning at this point, however, that Ong Bak 2 bares no relation to the
original smash hit. This is a sequel in name alone. Talk about troubled shoots.
After going way over budget, the first time director and star abandoned
production and escaped to a secluded hideaway until his mentor - Ong Bak
director Panna Rittikrai - stepped in to save the film.
As a result, Ong Bak 2 feels like it’s only telling half the
story, which it most certainly is, because Ong Bak 3 was released to critical
derision shortly afterwards. Compared to the disappointment of Part 3, Ong Bak
2 is pretty much a cinematic masterpiece. It's all about perception, you see.
Let's be brutally honest here, Ong Bak 2 has no plot to speak of. There are hints of
a forgotten script lurking beneath the bloodshed, but Jaa's comeback amounts to
little more than a string of well-choreographed fight scenes strung
together with a reckless disregard for viewer intelligence.
Jaa plays Tien, a young boy raised by bandits and taught in
the arts of warfare. You name it, he does it. Every martial arts discipline is
battered and bruised during the course of the movie, and no move goes
unpunished. A love story is introduced, as are an assortment of
characters, but they too are swept away by the crouching leg sweeps
and uninspired action sequences.
Don't get me wrong, sometimes all you need is mindless action, but even the
action sequences lack the originality of the first film. Ong Bak came with some
mesmerising stunts, so good in fact, you had to see them twice. Three times
even. Remember the scene where Tony Jaa is chased through a crowded street by
thugs? Of course you do, it was mesmerising.
Ong Bak 2 presents us with a series of fights and precious
little else. The creativity clearly went missing too, but unlike the film's
leading man, it never came back to this lacklustre sequel. Tien never appears
vulnerable because we never get to know anything about him. There are some nice
moments, even if most of them do involve elephants, but nothing here comes
close to the pulse-pounding power of the original movie. Though it would be
harsh to leave without mentioning the lush cinematography, Ong Bak 2 is
beautiful in places.
The ending is sudden, paving the way for part 3. The cut was made in order for
part 2 to see the light of day, but it doesn't do the completed picture
any favours at all. I was really looking forward to this, but for all its kick
ass confectionary and bloody warfare, Ong Bak 2 lacks anything approaching
storyline, character and creativity.
The elephant sequences are really cool, and action completists
might get a kick out of it, but Ong Bak 2 takes a shot in the dark and misses
the mark completely. AW
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