Future Fighters

[adrotate banner=”1″]Future Fighters Official Site

Future Fighters is some sort of live action mecha film set in the future featuring a who’s who of geek favorite Asian actors. In fact, the film seems to be heavily promoting itself in the geek community, constantly mentioning it’s Comic Con connections in press releases and geek connections of the actors, producers, and directors.

“In the 22nd Century the darkest region of space lies in the hearts of men.” The fate of all humanity rests with a small clutch of brave soldiers, and their sophisticated intra-stellar fighting machines, as they must defend the free solar system from a sinister invading force, in order to fight… for their future. But when allies become enemies and enemies become allies, battle-lines and allegiances are blurred as humanity races to save itself… from its own utter destruction.

Future Fighters has actors from the US, Hong Kong, and Japan, and is really trying to be a big co-production. There are a surprising number of these huge event films being announced in the past year or so – all 3D as well. Empires of the Deep is another one that comes to mind, except replace “mechas” and “space” with “mermaids” and “underwater.” I’ve gotten to the point of being burnt out on most of these huge productions, because most of them just aren’t any good. Remember how excited we all were when Kung Fu Cyborg was being announced and had rad production art? And then it sucked. I stopped paying attention to the huge sprawling war epics that were coming out of China after they were so boring that my wife, who will watch anything with Chinese people in it, got bored and went back to YouTube. I’m not saying this will be a bad film, I’m just saying it has a lot of work to do to not be a huge borefest. But one of these huge things should be good, via the law of averages. So get to work, Future Fighters, and be that one that’s good.

Who is starring? We got Yasuaki Kurata (Blood: The Last Vampire), Reuben Langdon (Devil May Cry video games), Gordon Liu (Kill Bill), Ray Park (Phantom Menace, GI Joe), Eriko Sato (Cutie Honey), Rina Takeda (High-Kick Girl!), and Lisa Sa (aka Lisa Cheng, a female body builder who has only had bit parts so far)

I’m not sure what these martial arts people are supposed to be doing in a mecha film. Rina Takeda’s job is to kick people in the face, you can’t really do that will strapped into a cockpit – okay, MAYBE Rina could… Ray Park and Gordon Liu are also people who should be showing off instead of piloting robots. In any event, this smells more like gimmick casting than actual real casting, and the bigger names will probably have smaller roles to the dudes we’ve never heard of. And maybe there is kicking in the face.

At least the production art looks cool (click for way too huge!):

Also put on your 3D glasses to see this in 3D:

So far all that is done is a preview trailer that isn’t part of the actual film:

Rina Takeda is Kunoichi

[adrotate banner=”1″]Rina Takeda has been cast in Alien vs. Ninja director Seiji Chiba’s upcoming ninja film Kunoichi.

UPDATE: Read the review of Kunoichi!

NipponCinema sez:
Takeda will play a female ninja named Kisaragi who attempts to rescue a group of women being held captive. It’s set sometime in the Sengoku period, during a time of fierce fighting between the Koga and Iga ninja clans.

Here is a kicking people in the head trailer also thanks to NipponCinema, who you should probably follow on Twitter to get news first, or wait a day until it shows up on everyone else’s website.

In addition, I’ve gotten a few episodes of the Ancient Dogoo Girls series with Rina Takeda in it and….my God. Japan is on crack!

Kunoichi

KG – Karate Girl

[adrotate banner=”1″]UPDATE: Read our review of KG – Karate Girl!

An English-subtitled trailer/behind the scenes reel for KG (aka Karate Girl) is up on YouTube. Karate Girl is the followup to Rina Takeda’s High-Kick Girl!, this time Rina plays the daughter of a murdered karate champion who finds out her little sister has been raised by the murderers to be a force of evil. It’s sister vs sister as Rina must save her but also get revenge against the people who killed her dad. And the trailer goes on and on about “real karate” and “no CGI” and “no wires”. Hopefully we get more Rina Takeda and less other people in this go round. In any event, this is on my 2011 must-see list. I must see it, I must!

KG/Karate Girl hits theaters in Japan on Feb 5th
via NipponCinema, as usual
KG Karate Girl

High-Kick Girl! (Review)

High-Kick Girl!

aka Hai kikku garu!

2009
Directed by Fuyuhiko Nishi
Written by Yoshikatsu Kimura and Fuyuhiko Nishi

High-Kick Girl was one of four films that came out or were announced close together that featured new female fighting talent as the leads, the others being Coweb from Hong Kong, Fighter from Denmark (review forthcoming), and Chocolate from Thailand.

For what is undoubtedly a low-budget flick, it does mush of what it sets out to do. The main goal is to showcase the karate skills of the stars, with plenty of real karate action and moves. Forget your wire work and CGI. The amount of prep work required must have been enormous for such a low-budget affair. Rumors abound that stunt people had to go take MRIs for having so many kicks to the heads and were really upset that the fighting was all “real” and they didn’t do takes where punches and kicks were pulled.

One constant stylization that High-Kick Girl uses is the different angle slow-mo instant replay. Many of the more brutal hits are instantly replayed from an alternate angle slow enough for you to enjoy them. This happens often enough that it probably added 20 minutes to the length of the film

Many of the characters are given introductions with their names when they first appear on screen. One problem is the fact the intros are in Japanese with no subtitles. I can read some of the characters, so there will be a few actual names below, but some of them I didn’t catch.

Kei Tsuchiya (Rina Takeda) – A real-life blackbelt in karate who will kick you in the head just because she can. This girl kicks high, thus the title, Kick High Girl. Wait, that’s not the title!
Yoshiaki Matsumura (Tatsuya Naka) – Tatsuya Naka is a real life Karate champion, as in a former All Japan Karate champion who is now the Japan Karate Association lead instructor.
Kei’s buddy (???) – Kei’s buddy who documents her attempts to beat up everyone in the universe.
Ryuzoku (Sudo Masahiro) – Matsumura’s former associate with a grudge. Ryuzoku is part of a larger mob of goons who all hate Matsumura, and he gets to him by going through Kei and using her to track down his foe.
Genga (Amano Koji) – Leader of the gang (the Destroyers) with a grudge against Matsumura. What this grudge is, I don’t know thanks to the no subtitles, but my guess is Matsumura


Continue reading

High Kick Girl – trailer 2

[adrotate banner=”1″]EDIT: Our Full Review is up!!

High Kick Girl continues to kick high and be a girl in the second trailer that was posted on the Official site but you will probably have better luck finding it on NipponCinema.com (and watch the behind the scenes clips)

Plot: Kei (Rina Takeda) joins a karate dojo and quickly proves herself to be the most skilled fighter amongst all her male peers. However, her sensei Matsumura still refuses to give her the coveted black belt until she learns all the kata (forms). Too impatient to wait any longer, Kei hastily joins a fighting group called the Destroyers. The Destroyers don’t care about anything but fighting and earning money, and this suits Kei just fine. But when she finds out their true purpose—to destroy Matsumura—she decides she must do whatever it takes to put a stop to them.

There is also a new poster! It looks like a normal Japanese poster so I like it less than the first one.
high_kick_girl_poster2

Find the first trailer here