Facts. It's all together for me action choreographer, camera man and action stars. But this kind of camera work and editing does not exist in Hollywood. Like in Mile 22 with Mark Wahlberg and Iko Uwais, they did so many edits and close ups for Iko's fight scene. The disrespect for Iko there.
Check out The Night Comes For Us its as equally brutal and Iko Uwais is the bad guy in that movie. The main character in that movie is the same actor that played Sub Zero in the recent live action MK movie
Fun fact: the guys in the Raid movies are such good martial artists that all the body shots you see are real. They know how to pull their punches but make it look like they’re really hitting hard. Amazing work.
They are doing Silat and the The Kitchen guy is Cecep Arif Rahman, one of the most famous Silat martial artists he's also in John Wick 3, alongside Yayan Ruhian
A competent fighter lands punches, an expert learns to aim strikes just beyond where they are actually going to impact because the follow through is what does a lot of the damage. I watched this a couple times, these guys are masters of ending strikes just shy of connecting. Although, in a few cases you can see where stuff actually staggered one or the other of them when they did more stuff around the metal table.
Love how at the start they are relatively unscathed but before the karabit fight you can see the bruising, redness and damage to their faces happening during the fight... brilliant choreography and editing..
The amount of trust these actors have amongst each other is incredible. I know they are fake knives, but one bad swing, and you can puncture a cheek, puncture the stomach, puncture AN EYE. And those don't really heal (I know.) I think Jason Statham said Stuntmen should have their own Academy Award, and he was absolutely right.
@@LanChiaoPeng They don't have "Teacher - Student" relationship between them. Iko is from different Pencak Silat school and a grandmaster in his own right. Both are excellent martial artists.
This is literally the best fight scene in the entire 2-hour long film. The sparring at the beginning, the chaos in the kitchen and the look of relieved fear in Rama's eyes in the end was just masterpiece action defined❤
One of the things about this incredible sequence that doesn’t get enough credit is the amazing sense of space and environment that it creates. In a largely monochromic setting with a constantly rotating camera, you never lose your sense of bearings. From the get-go it’s established that the pans are to the left, the stoves are to the right, the wine cellar is to the back, and the counter anchors it all. It’s amazing.
I said it many times already but repeat it again. This scene is a Mona Lisa of martial arts cinema. Yes there are timeless classics from the past, but this is legendary, modern day piece which will be studied. And its not about if its realistic or no, its about acting performances and masterful video & audio editing/effects. Whenever i see it (seen it like 100 times +) i feel like to cry from joy how well is made.
As someone who worked in kitchens in catering places for 10 years, I can confirm this is pretty much how it was most days. Especially on double shifts 😂
This scene, alone, is #1 in martial arts film history to this day. I don't think anything can compare to the pace and choreography of this scene. It's like the director said "When I say action, just go for what you know🤷🏿♂️! Have fun!"
In terms of old classics, watch Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao movies made from the 1980s to mid 1990s. Modern-wise, watch Donnie Yen's contemporary action movies from 2005 to present
I love how the bad guy's actor is a highschool teacher and martial arts instructor in real life. He's a great person and very kind when he demonstrated silat to us in HK at a seminar
I feel like nobody would notice that he isn't an actual trained actor because his acting is top notch, imo. I loved his menacing facial expressions and the pain he conveys whenever injury is inflicted. I'll say the same for Iko Uwais here as well.
For me this is better than The Raid 1 Final battle. The gore and blood show the progression of fight, making it more messy towards end of the battle. Props to all crew's for making this intense battle.
The raid movies are probably the best action movies ever made. The choreography is top notch obviously, but the music, the intensity and the clean camerawork make EVERY SINGLE HIT COUNT. I find myself listening to the soundtrack for this last kitchen fight every now and then. It's always such a thrill ride. I regret never getting to see them in the theater.
The only thing that prevented the Raid series from being as big as John Wick or Equalizer, was that Americans are too lazy or too dim to keep up with reading subtitles. If English was spoken itd be one of the most popular martial arts movies ever released in the US
real high end restaurants are super clean. I used to be the GM of a fancy restaurant in SF and the kitchen staff would spend an insane amount of time cleaning the kitchen every day. The head chef wouldn't put up with dirtiness anywhere there was food. Even the walk in fridge was spotless with everything labeled with what date it was made and mopped out every night. Edit - oh ya and then on top of that we had a separate outsourced janitorial staff who would come in almost every night after midnight and do another deep clean after everything had been put away and all the staff went home.
Ive watched this fight at least 5 or 6 times now and its finally dawned on me that the villain actually was losing from the beginning. He got in less shots and resorted to weapons half way through. He just lasted longer due to endurance and being a badass but he actually missed more than he connected.
That's the thing. He was a legendary, cold-blooded assassin, but compared to a cop who survived the madness of the first raid movie and had literally fought his way through a warehouse before this? The initial confrontation was more of him fooling around. He looked at Rama and his battered state assumed he was an easy game like the last guy he had killed, and decided to let him warm up first to demonstrate his superiority. Yet the moment Rama got into it started hammering the heck out of him, it was only when the knives came out that it felt like he had really gained any ground.
Rama is a legend... dude fought him earlier, got beat down... studied him, memorized anticipated his moves, and only adapted quicker the longer the fight lasted here... a horrific enemy for any villain to have to face.
Yeah. Once Rama stops doing the more formal sparring at the very beginning and gets to swinging, he lands nearly twice the shots his opponent does. It's only really an even fight for the bit where the assassin has two karambit to Rama's zero.
Just watched this film and had to come back to TH-cam to see this again. One of the best action sequences I've ever seen. Absolutely fantastic - perfect atmosphere and music choice too.
Every scene of this film is like an addiction for me, there is no bad action, just true brutality, It's fun to watch this over and over again The gore and blood show the progression of fight, making it more messy towards end of the battle. I disclose, the best ever made till date…Been watching the best action for over 25 years....OMG
Rama has such insane endurance and stamina that he took those hits like it was nothing, immediately attacking, and only felt pain from his slashed leg while the assassins basically hanging in there from Rama's hits that he resorted to use the karambit. And to add to that the assassin was actually in fresh condition than Rama. What a beast
This scene is incredible. Throughout the two films, Rama faces criminals who are quite similar to him. He's a cop and he meets corrupt cops. His own brother becomes a gangster. Ecka was once undercover and comes from a similar socioeconomic background. These are all figures that Rama could have become had he chosen a different path in life. It's no accident that this silat fighter in the kitchen visually resembles Rama. They have the same build, same haircut, and same clothes. When they spar in the beginning, it's clear they have the same formal silat training. This man is exactly who Rama could have easily become had he succumbed to the temptation of the criminal underworld. His eventual victory is an overt, symbolic one.
@@aleksandrmarkov1506 по сухожилию не попал значит, раз скачет. Логично? Так, кожу ободрал только) Драка реально, одна из лучших снятых в кино. Это не примитив из фильмов ван Дамма😁
Such a killer movie. I saw it on post in FT. Benning GA when I was in Airborne school in '14 and had never even heard of the first. One of the best actions movies ever made.
honestly these action movies are the ones i usually prefer because not only did these guys know martial arts but the camera work is also so smooth having a continuous fight before switching angles unlike most hollywood movies where they cut at each second making me dizzy and looking so fake.
Every scene of this film is like an addiction for me, there is no bad action, just true brutality, It's fun to watch this over and over again The gore and blood show the progression of fight, making it more messy towards end of the battle. I disclose, the best ever made till date…Been watching the best action for over 25 years....OMG
After that 3rd lil round of what looks like them sizing each other up ( 1:00 ), it's just 5 more minutes of two men trying their DAMN hardest to make sure the other doesn't walk out with their soul 😂😂😂
The Raid and The Raid 2 were probably Iko's best work. Gareth Evans definitely nailed it with his own style of martial arts action movies. I've seen some of the recent work featuring Iko and the fight scenes are not as intense and impactful.
@josephlai1078 watch the movie the night comes us. This film reached the level of brutality of RAID 1 and 2 and also features actors Joe Taslim and Iko Iwans who also made the films RAID 1 and 2.
NGL It is the best action movie of all time even better than all Hollywood action movies. The way they depicted the brutality of every character while fighting & continuity in the camera angles, sequence, tension, etc etc is so perfect. Hats off to the director, actors, action designer, everyone!
Каждое движение, каждый шаг, каждый миллиметр отточен до совершенства! Эталон экшен боевиков! Гаррет Эванс бесподобен, а актеры исполнившие это достойны величайших похвал!
Filming and editing of this scene is tough not only for the full contact action choreography, but also for the shining steel furniture, which may capture the camera person or any other spot-boys'..
These two locking kerambits near the end of the fight is so ridiculous logically, but so perfect as a visual acknowledgment of their being essentially equally matched.
Say what you will about choreography, camera work, and so on-- because it is incredible obviously. But how about a shoutout to the makeup crew for making Cecep look more and more bloodied as the fight progresses. It's a fun bit of attention to detail because the man's head is constantly being slammed into things and each time there is a new contusion, cut, and everything else in between.
Gra aktorska na światowym poziomie.Niemniej jednak operator ..kamerzysta tej sceny to mistrz świata.To rzadkość ująć dramaturgię tej walki w ten sposób...Myślę że pokazywanie światu scen z różnych stron świata to mały pikuś...przy dzisiejszej technologi można ją wykrzywiać do takiego stopnia że przeciętny człowiek zrozumie że ziemia jest płaska.
Some of the blows in this scene look brutal. I feel like I would have gone down after a few hits. I love how you can see how some of the hits disorient them or nearly knock them out.
Love seeing a martial arts fight scene where the good guy (Rama) ultimately wins but he takes an absolute whopping during the fight. By the end of the scene, yes he has won, but he's at about 10% HP and that's so much more exciting than watching a good guy just wail on a baddie the whole fight.
Every scene of this film is like an addiction for me, there is no bad action, just true brutality, It's fun to watch this over and over again
Iko is a legend in his craft 💪🏽❤️
Yuugmmgf
2:33
Isn't just choreography, the cameras/perspectives and photography are outstanding. All together made this scene almost impossible to surpass.
True even jet li Jackie Chan and ip man can't compete with this kind of intensity
1 thing is under apreciate , the music background . Its so fit with the situation . Its makes it perfect
🤙🤙🤙
Thats why we need another gareth and iko joint
Facts. It's all together for me action choreographer, camera man and action stars. But this kind of camera work and editing does not exist in Hollywood. Like in Mile 22 with Mark Wahlberg and Iko Uwais, they did so many edits and close ups for Iko's fight scene. The disrespect for Iko there.
Well I thank them for their dedication to this scene cause nothing really comes close to how good this fight was
Check out The Night Comes For Us its as equally brutal and Iko Uwais is the bad guy in that movie. The main character in that movie is the same actor that played Sub Zero in the recent live action MK movie
What he means is that the fight doesn't come close lol.
@@ryanglacier30+ Artistic is perfect
@@PierreAbdulSutisna beyond perfection. Hopefully Havoc is good
@@borinken2498hi
Literally one of the best fight scenes EVER MADE.
after tom yum goong-
THE best fight u mean ;)
The best....
This fight is SICK.....!!!!!!!
Damnnn fight and brutality, man.....!!!!!!
no "THE best fight scene EVER made"
Fun fact: the guys in the Raid movies are such good martial artists that all the body shots you see are real. They know how to pull their punches but make it look like they’re really hitting hard.
Amazing work.
They are doing Silat and the The Kitchen guy is Cecep Arif Rahman, one of the most famous Silat martial artists he's also in John Wick 3, alongside Yayan Ruhian
A competent fighter lands punches, an expert learns to aim strikes just beyond where they are actually going to impact because the follow through is what does a lot of the damage.
I watched this a couple times, these guys are masters of ending strikes just shy of connecting. Although, in a few cases you can see where stuff actually staggered one or the other of them when they did more stuff around the metal table.
@@13shadowwolf Do you know martial arts?
So? @@13shadowwolf
Really? I thought they were just random guys they pulled off the street
Love how at the start they are relatively unscathed but before the karabit fight you can see the bruising, redness and damage to their faces happening during the fight... brilliant choreography and editing..
Karambit stuff was a bit bland, still when he gets iko and he gives him the left and right; I liked that.
This is the best fighting movie of all time in my opinion.
This is the best fighting movie of all time in my opinion.
The amount of trust these actors have amongst each other is incredible. I know they are fake knives, but one bad swing, and you can puncture a cheek, puncture the stomach, puncture AN EYE. And those don't really heal (I know.) I think Jason Statham said Stuntmen should have their own Academy Award, and he was absolutely right.
Ariff Rahman (the assassin) is the main silat guru of Iko Uwais. They've known each other and trained together for years.
@@LanChiaoPengcecep Arif Rehman
@@LanChiaoPeng They don't have "Teacher - Student" relationship between them. Iko is from different Pencak Silat school and a grandmaster in his own right. Both are excellent martial artists.
This is literally the best fight scene in the entire 2-hour long film. The sparring at the beginning, the chaos in the kitchen and the look of relieved fear in Rama's eyes in the end was just masterpiece action defined❤
That's not saying much at all... it's the best fight scene EVER FILMED.
@@jordan234674 Literally ✊🏻
@@jordan234674hi
Don't forget about the car chase.
@@seanharrison933 💯
I loved it when the bad guy reaches out his hand and says, “It’s an honor to fight with you…Mr Wick.”
Ahahahaha cuz he was in the movie if im not wrong right?
The bad guy
@@adrianstjarnfaldt9895yup. And Prakoso
@@adrianstjarnfaldt9895 - Yea, he’s a killer stunt man…been in a lot of awesome martial arts brawls.
That guy use 'Siliwangi Tiger Style'. He also represent the tiger energy on this scene...
One of the things about this incredible sequence that doesn’t get enough credit is the amazing sense of space and environment that it creates. In a largely monochromic setting with a constantly rotating camera, you never lose your sense of bearings. From the get-go it’s established that the pans are to the left, the stoves are to the right, the wine cellar is to the back, and the counter anchors it all. It’s amazing.
Also since it’s all white it makes their silhouettes easier to read and makes the blood pop out more
I said it many times already but repeat it again. This scene is a Mona Lisa of martial arts cinema. Yes there are timeless classics from the past, but this is legendary, modern day piece which will be studied. And its not about if its realistic or no, its about acting performances and masterful video & audio editing/effects. Whenever i see it (seen it like 100 times +) i feel like to cry from joy how well is made.
As someone who worked in kitchens in catering places for 10 years, I can confirm this is pretty much how it was most days. Especially on double shifts 😂
Sunday before xmas double shift bloodbath.
Cringe but well not cringe
Especially when co-workers get frustrated about hours being cut. They get to cutting in other ways…
😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂 how did you survive 😂😂
This scene, alone, is #1 in martial arts film history to this day. I don't think anything can compare to the pace and choreography of this scene. It's like the director said "When I say action, just go for what you know🤷🏿♂️! Have fun!"
Meals on wheels- Jackie Chan vs Benny the Jet- would like a word lol
In terms of old classics, watch Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao movies made from the 1980s to mid 1990s. Modern-wise, watch Donnie Yen's contemporary action movies from 2005 to present
I love how the bad guy's actor is a highschool teacher and martial arts instructor in real life. He's a great person and very kind when he demonstrated silat to us in HK at a seminar
Imagine having him for your teacher after this movie came out. "Yes sir, we'll do our homework without complaint!" 😂
I feel like nobody would notice that he isn't an actual trained actor because his acting is top notch, imo. I loved his menacing facial expressions and the pain he conveys whenever injury is inflicted. I'll say the same for Iko Uwais here as well.
For me this is better than The Raid 1 Final battle.
The gore and blood show the progression of fight, making it more messy towards end of the battle.
Props to all crew's for making this intense battle.
The whole raid 2 movie FAR better than the raid 1.
JJK just brought me back her for referencing it lol
Chainsaw Man also made a reference to the same scene but we gotta wait for a while for the anime to reach that point (2 or 3 more seasons?)
@@ajinurfajri1952 yoshida vs quanxi.
Anime is gay
@Eniggma-im5xt aw look someone trying to grab attention
@@yuanxiu37then I must be mega gay because anime kicks asses
The raid movies are probably the best action movies ever made. The choreography is top notch obviously, but the music, the intensity and the clean camerawork make EVERY SINGLE HIT COUNT. I find myself listening to the soundtrack for this last kitchen fight every now and then. It's always such a thrill ride.
I regret never getting to see them in the theater.
The only thing that prevented the Raid series from being as big as John Wick or Equalizer, was that Americans are too lazy or too dim to keep up with reading subtitles. If English was spoken itd be one of the most popular martial arts movies ever released in the US
The most unrealistic thing about this scene is how clean that kitchen is.
real high end restaurants are super clean. I used to be the GM of a fancy restaurant in SF and the kitchen staff would spend an insane amount of time cleaning the kitchen every day. The head chef wouldn't put up with dirtiness anywhere there was food. Even the walk in fridge was spotless with everything labeled with what date it was made and mopped out every night.
Edit - oh ya and then on top of that we had a separate outsourced janitorial staff who would come in almost every night after midnight and do another deep clean after everything had been put away and all the staff went home.
I had see this kind of clean kitchen in Japan
Towards end it got decorated
😂
Hahaha
One of the best fight scenes possibly ever imo
Ive watched this fight at least 5 or 6 times now and its finally dawned on me that the villain actually was losing from the beginning. He got in less shots and resorted to weapons half way through. He just lasted longer due to endurance and being a badass but he actually missed more than he connected.
That's the thing. He was a legendary, cold-blooded assassin, but compared to a cop who survived the madness of the first raid movie and had literally fought his way through a warehouse before this?
The initial confrontation was more of him fooling around. He looked at Rama and his battered state assumed he was an easy game like the last guy he had killed, and decided to let him warm up first to demonstrate his superiority. Yet the moment Rama got into it started hammering the heck out of him, it was only when the knives came out that it felt like he had really gained any ground.
Rama is a legend... dude fought him earlier, got beat down... studied him, memorized anticipated his moves, and only adapted quicker the longer the fight lasted here... a horrific enemy for any villain to have to face.
Yeah Rama was beating the heck out of him, if the assassin hadn't had the knives, fight would've been over sooner...
Yeah. Once Rama stops doing the more formal sparring at the very beginning and gets to swinging, he lands nearly twice the shots his opponent does. It's only really an even fight for the bit where the assassin has two karambit to Rama's zero.
Does a sober person withstand that anyway?
One of the best fight scenes of all time.
Hands down one of the best choreographed one on one fights in the last ten years if not the best.
Best in history. Even Bruce Lee can't even fight like that!
The pace of this scene is absolutely pure art, its quite literally a dance. Masterclass movie
This Fight is the GREATEST Fight of all Time It’s not even close love every second of it !
after tom yumg goong
Irih ajah lo thagay🏳️🌈😂🤣🤣@@cucventures7306
One of the most brutal fight scenes I've ever watched.
Mortal combat type fighting
I love how the kitchen staff just nopes out of there.
Still one of the most satisfying fights in movie history imo. So well choreographed and bloody
1:49 That punch was clean!
Combo
yup that started the kick
That was the moment Rama won the fight, you can tell the assassin lost a lot of composure when his moves are no longer as smooth as it was before.
There’s no way those two didn’t get hurt a LOT, for real making this. Awesome!
For me, this is the best fight scene in history.
the pause for the build up of last fight is something else..the music cutoff as ratma cut the throat...daym...the best fight scene ever
Once something like this is created, there's no surpassing. Till date this is The Best action scene I've seen.
Just watched this film and had to come back to TH-cam to see this again. One of the best action sequences I've ever seen. Absolutely fantastic - perfect atmosphere and music choice too.
Who is here after watching YUJI VS CHOSO?? Both legendary scenes.🔥
malevolent kitchen
After watching JJK new episode choso vs yuji i m back to see this fight again its always amazing
It's no where near a reference yall just making stuff up
The creator confirmed tho
@@ThisIsMeAndGodsVictory The creator of the manga Jujutsu Kaisen once said he was inspired by The Raid
Husband to wife: "Are you finally going to start dinner?"
Her response: *1:58*
Husband counter response: 2:03
probably the best fighting scene ever made.
Its also fantastic the way that the music ramps up as the fight ramps up, adds to the ferocity of the fight
Rama s flying kick to the bad guy flying over the table was unbelievable, I rewinded it to see it again,how good it was!!
one of the greatest fight scenes of all time , no wonder these other don't even come close
even without CGI and the fight scenes are still so much more impactful.
the way they sparred in the beginning to feel each other out was awesome
from the beginning of the scene I really enjoyed their scene, until the last minute I got goosebumps
i think this is the most amazing fighting scene ever filmed
Every scene of this film is like an addiction for me, there is no bad action, just true brutality, It's fun to watch this over and over again
The gore and blood show the progression of fight, making it more messy towards end of the battle.
I disclose, the best ever made till date…Been watching the best action for over 25 years....OMG
OMG! I’ve never seen a fight scene so intense as this one.
I always come back to this scene once every year and I am always blown away! Everything about this was PERFECT
Martial arts name?
Silat@@pillairaja1993
Mee
Calienten
Silat @@pillairaja1993
Is it just me or is that the best mano e mano fight scene ever filmed ?
Hands down this is the best fight scene ever in the history of cinematography
I always watch this scene before i do my workout. Guaranteed adrenaline boost.
That was brutal and I loved every second of it, apparently this one fight scene took 6 months to choreograph and film.
4 months it took 4 months
@@adrianstjarnfaldt9895still that’s insane
The Kitchen and Hallway fight kept me on the edge of my seat. Really impressive choreography 💪
Rama has such insane endurance and stamina that he took those hits like it was nothing, immediately attacking, and only felt pain from his slashed leg while the assassins basically hanging in there from Rama's hits that he resorted to use the karambit. And to add to that the assassin was actually in fresh condition than Rama. What a beast
It was about Adrenaline
klo rama iko uwais lawan ip man. Sama2 menang yah. Ga ada yg kalah ❤😂
Calienten
This scene is incredible. Throughout the two films, Rama faces criminals who are quite similar to him. He's a cop and he meets corrupt cops. His own brother becomes a gangster. Ecka was once undercover and comes from a similar socioeconomic background. These are all figures that Rama could have become had he chosen a different path in life. It's no accident that this silat fighter in the kitchen visually resembles Rama. They have the same build, same haircut, and same clothes. When they spar in the beginning, it's clear they have the same formal silat training. This man is exactly who Rama could have easily become had he succumbed to the temptation of the criminal underworld. His eventual victory is an overt, symbolic one.
The greatest action movie of all time with the best final sequence! 10 days of filming and 190 shots.
Cecep and Iko. Legendary fight, perhaps one of the best martial art scenes in the modern cinematography
Calienten
who's here after watching jjk episode 13 Yuji vs Choso fight ?
I love the way the kitchen staff quickly assessed the situation and decided, it was a good time for that smoke break.😂
Yes, it's very funny this moment that 😂😂😂
The heavy breathing at the end was the icing on the cake.
raid 1 & 2 have my favorite fight scenes, the chorography, the camera movement, and brutal and bloody.!
Calienten
Вообще-то, хочу сказать.... это самая лучшая сцена боя, когда либо снятая
Ага. Тебе сухожилие(-ия) перерезали, а ты скачешь, как кузнечик... Тру стори, рил щит
@@aleksandrmarkov1506 Я думаю он про постановку и зрелищность, а не реализм
@@aleksandrmarkov1506 по сухожилию не попал значит, раз скачет. Логично? Так, кожу ободрал только)
Драка реально, одна из лучших снятых в кино. Это не примитив из фильмов ван Дамма😁
если так было бы в сценарии, то бои проходили бы секунд 10, а это скучно и никому не интересно@@aleksandrmarkov1506
As an Indian I just want to say this is the best hand to hand fight scene in history of action cinema 🇮🇳❤️🙏
You have a virus sir. Want to have tech support resolving the issue ?
What are Indians doing here? Shouldn't you be off somewhere scamming people?
@@TheGXDividerthe way u responded itself indicates that you need more technical support boy!!
So what, keep your nationalist supremacy to yourself, couldn't have appreciated just like an audience member.
@AyushSharma-yf3qu This movie is Indonesian, not Indian. He was legitimately giving them props.
Such a killer movie. I saw it on post in FT. Benning GA when I was in Airborne school in '14 and had never even heard of the first. One of the best actions movies ever made.
Tony jaa, scott adikkins, jason satatham, iko uwais, maichel J white, boyoka...etc., there are many artist just stole the hearts...❤
Einer der besten Kampfszenen überhaupt
honestly these action movies are the ones i usually prefer because not only did these guys know martial arts but the camera work is also so smooth having a continuous fight before switching angles unlike most hollywood movies where they cut at each second making me dizzy and looking so fake.
Yes man yes! No switching angles so it looks like they're hitting someone! Hit them! Hit them and show it not hit them and hurt them!
agree
The best fighting movie so far nothing can be compared to this
One of the best fight scenes ever done...
Every scene of this film is like an addiction for me, there is no bad action, just true brutality, It's fun to watch this over and over again
The gore and blood show the progression of fight, making it more messy towards end of the battle.
I disclose, the best ever made till date…Been watching the best action for over 25 years....OMG
Thank you
I've seen a lot of action movies man, but this fight is something else.
This is how you take a masterpiece fight scene.... The last few seconds, it was gory 🔥
I love the way Uwais killed every main assassins with their own weapons in this movie.
It was a very intensive and brutal fight, one of the best fights I have seen.
Hollywood can't even hold a candle to this masterpiece 🔥
This is one of the best movie and it doesn't need another sequel
Show of hands, who else watching this after Jujutsu Kaisen S2 Episode 13? 🔥🔥🔥
After that 3rd lil round of what looks like them sizing each other up ( 1:00 ), it's just 5 more minutes of two men trying their DAMN hardest to make sure the other doesn't walk out with their soul 😂😂😂
The Raid and The Raid 2 were probably Iko's best work. Gareth Evans definitely nailed it with his own style of martial arts action movies. I've seen some of the recent work featuring Iko and the fight scenes are not as intense and impactful.
More Hollywood'ised.
@josephlai1078 watch the movie the night comes us.
This film reached the level of brutality of RAID 1 and 2 and also features actors Joe Taslim and Iko Iwans who also made the films RAID 1 and 2.
NGL It is the best action movie of all time even better than all Hollywood action movies. The way they depicted the brutality of every character while fighting & continuity in the camera angles, sequence, tension, etc etc is so perfect. Hats off to the director, actors, action designer, everyone!
Каждое движение, каждый шаг, каждый миллиметр отточен до совершенства! Эталон экшен боевиков! Гаррет Эванс бесподобен, а актеры исполнившие это достойны величайших похвал!
Ну, это кагбе не совсем просто актеры. :) Во всяком случае Ико Ювайс (исполнитель главной роли) - чемпион Индонезии по пенчак силату.
все эти "боссы" в фильмах рейд и рейд 2 занимаются единоборствами, это не какие то там фанерные голливудские актеры@@Real_Red_Fox
this is a fight scene you would watch again and again and still feel tensed!
Filming and editing of this scene is tough not only for the full contact action choreography, but also for the shining steel furniture, which may capture the camera person or any other spot-boys'..
These two locking kerambits near the end of the fight is so ridiculous logically, but so perfect as a visual acknowledgment of their being essentially equally matched.
The kitchen staff coming to work the next day...😢😢
This honestly is elevated so much by the soundtrack.
IMO this is THE greatest martial arts fight scenes ever put on film.
THIS WILL NEVER GET OLD
Say what you will about choreography, camera work, and so on-- because it is incredible obviously. But how about a shoutout to the makeup crew for making Cecep look more and more bloodied as the fight progresses. It's a fun bit of attention to detail because the man's head is constantly being slammed into things and each time there is a new contusion, cut, and everything else in between.
I love this scene, brutal and full of messy blood... tell me if there is another movie scene that surpasses this scene...
Kill Bill
The witch part 1 n 2
The Night Comes For Us final fight
Machete gang fight the original raid
John wick
The fight scenes of this movie are straight up savage.
This movie , this scene , these TWO , the CHOREOGRAPHY ❤❤❤
Gra aktorska na światowym poziomie.Niemniej jednak operator ..kamerzysta tej sceny to mistrz świata.To rzadkość ująć dramaturgię tej walki w ten sposób...Myślę że pokazywanie światu scen z różnych stron świata to mały pikuś...przy dzisiejszej technologi można ją wykrzywiać do takiego stopnia że przeciętny człowiek zrozumie że ziemia jest płaska.
Some of the blows in this scene look brutal. I feel like I would have gone down after a few hits. I love how you can see how some of the hits disorient them or nearly knock them out.
One of the best modern fight scenes - can’t get enough of the TH-cam recommendations.
The teacher got taught 😂😂
I have nothing constructive to say, I just want to point out how much I love his little shuffle at 0:25.
So what’s taking my chicken Parmesan so long?
Hold on, guys are actually cutting some meat for it
Love seeing a martial arts fight scene where the good guy (Rama) ultimately wins but he takes an absolute whopping during the fight. By the end of the scene, yes he has won, but he's at about 10% HP and that's so much more exciting than watching a good guy just wail on a baddie the whole fight.
Saw this lots of time, still loving it. Everything there is huge and intense 🙏🏻
As a sous chef of 10 years, this is the cleanest kitchen I’ve ever seen.
litterally the best fight ever put to screen