The Kung Fu Master Review: Great Wing Chun Kung Fu Sequences Ruined By Simple Plot (Rating: **1/2)

Film: The Kung Fu Master

Cast: Neeta Pillai, Jiji Scaria

Director: Abrid Shine

Rating: **1/2

Reviewer: George Sylex

Overview - Abrid Shine is a Filmmaker who attempts various subjects for all his movies. In his fourth film, he tries Wing Chun style, Kung Fu, in a vengeance action movie. The Kung Fu Master features the sort of battle scenes that Malayalam film has not seen before.

Story - Kung Fu Master' is about the kin Rithu (Neeta Pillai) and Rishi (Jiji Scaria), who discover their lives improved all on an abrupt when Louis Antony (Sanoop Dinesh) scows into their pure home one night and slaughters everybody around. Left for dead, Rishi clutches the last remainders of life in him and works his way back to life, helped by his sister. With none left aside from one another to connect with, they live on, with the sole aim of looking for retribution on the ones that had demolished their lives destroyed.

Analysis - The structure of the story is laid appropriately, characters presentations keep you fascinated yet the film falls behind at the most significant crossroads – the story and execution. The film's first issue is consistency. With no curiosity being added to the current format, we recognize what will occur, both in the passionate parts just as the action sequences. In any case, what causes us to put resources into the action scenes is the reasonable use of BGM.

The format commercial treatment to the screenplay sometimes falls short for the flavor of the present crowd, so neglecting to build up an association. The old hat screenplay may give the vibe of this feels familiar. The sensational exchanges cause the crowd to feel much increasingly removed. The film thinks that its difficult to leave this layout and crashes and burns in many spots. That becomes one significant stress.

Direction, Action, Cinematography, Editing - Director Abrid Shine builds a decent measure of fights conveniently with his composition. Simultaneously, with an all the more captivating screenplay, this film would've satisfied an alternate brand. The freshness is missing and other than it's hand to hand fighting fight arrangements, the crowd finds a workable pace that they've just gone over in past events.

The action design managed by Abrid Shine and is energizing, however low on the curiosity factor. It is, however, exceptionally fascinating to see Neeta Pillai look athletic and take on the villains; she looks truly conceivable doing as such. Jiji Scaria is additionally acceptable with his quick punches, which is somewhat the feature of the action sequences. Sanoop is exaggerating and menacing. Production esteems are acceptable and details are fine. Arjun Ravi's cinematography and fresh editing of Midhun keep up the adrenaline surge.

Overall - If you are an action addict and searching for an action magnificence without disapproving of much about the story, then Kung Fu Master - kicks a few butts of a dreamer popcorn fun. If not, at that point skip it.

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About GeorgeSylex

Film Critic, Writer, Reviewer, Columnist

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The Kung Fu Master
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