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GeneChing
09-12-2011, 09:48 AM
Eager to see this one as I feel Iko has serious potential as the new martial arts megastar. Iko also stars in Merantau (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=53100) and the upcoming Berandal (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=59354). The U.S. release of The Raid is to be scored by Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park.

The Raid Official Trailer-Mike Shinoda Linkin Park (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SjAfIAeGZ4&feature=youtu.be)

The Raid has been leaked on YouTube, but I refuse to watch flicks on YouTube. I hear it premieres at the 2011 Toronto Film Festival.

GeneChing
09-15-2011, 09:46 AM
Interesting about Gareth Evans. I look forward to seeing this film.

Indonesian martial arts star Iko Uwais kicks the silat out of his enemies (http://arts.nationalpost.com/2011/09/14/indonesian-martial-arts-star-iko-uwais-kicks-the-silat-out-of-his-enemies/)
Aaron Lynett / National Post
http://nationalpostarts.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/iko.jpg?w=620
Martial Arts star Iko Uwais

Melissa Leong Sep 14, 2011 – 12:30 PM ET | Last Updated: Sep 14, 2011 3:42 PM ET

Dressed in a light grey sweatshirt, jeans and white Pumas, Iko Uwais looks like a college student. He has this boyish innocence — whether it’s the way he talks about wanting to make his parents proud or his enjoyment filming a brief romantic scene in a movie.

But this is not the Iko Uwais that you see in The Raid. The person onscreen in the Midnight Madness favourite is a killing machine. He spends the entire movie breaking noses, dislocating shoulders, popping knee caps and stabbing torsos.

The 28-year-old Indonesian martial arts phenom plays Rama, a SWAT member who becomes trapped in a drug lord’s Jakarta lair. The run-down apartment is filled with drug dealers, criminals and murderers — all of whom know martial arts and can take at least a dozen punches each. And Rama must beat his way out. It makes Die Hard look like a cakewalk.

The Raid, which screened at the Toronto International Film Festival this past weekend to over-the-top rave reviews, is Welsh filmmaker Gareth Evans’s second action film featuring Uwais. The first, Merantau, was released in 2009.

About four years ago, Evans, a budding filmmaker, travelled to Indonesia to shoot a documentary about the culture and the combat style pencak silat when he discovered Uwais in a silat school.

“He’s very humble and quiet but then when he put his uniform on and started doing martial arts, he transformed,” Evans, 31, says in an interview in Toronto to promote the film. “He looked like he could do some serious damage.”

Uwais, who was working as a driver for a telecommunications company, had been practicing silat since 1993. “To me,” Uwais says through an interpreter, “he was just a white guy with a camera trying to make a documentary.”

But Evans wanted him to star in an action film. “I didn’t believe him. I thought it was too good to be true,” Uwais says.

The fighters trained for three months before filming The Raid. “On the shooting day, we had to precisely do the choreography. We were well prepared for the fight scenes,” says Joe Taslim, a national judo champion who plays Rama’s sergeant. “We’re both athletes so the action scenes are not difficult but the drama requires more focus.”

Funny enough, despite the fighting and falling Uwais had to endure, the thing that bothered him most on set was dust.

He rubs the back of his neck: “I really hated the dust they used in the movie. It would get stuck on my neck and it was so itchy. I’d take a bath four times and it was hard to get rid of. After it was all gone, Gareth would tell me that we needed to do another take.”

Evans, meanwhile, found the fight scenes especially challenging. There were a few injuries here and there, he admits. “Just before the shoot, Iko had fallen and twisted his knee. He couldn’t do anything for three weeks.”

There was the time a stuntman missed the crash mats and landed on concrete. And then there was the time that Evans thought an actor had lost an eye. In one scene, Uwais hooked his opponent with a baton and pulled him into a wooden knife; the other actor was supposed to move his head. On Evans’ monitor, he saw Uwais gasp and immediately hugged the actor.

“It was literally one inch away from his eye. After that, everyone was nervous. In the next shot, if you look closely enough, there’s a little plaster on his cheek.”

But at the end of the day, Evans succeeded in creating raw and realistic-looking brutality. “They’ve got SWAT team training,” he says. “They’re in a situation where it’s kill or be killed. All of the choreography had to be that if he’s not killing that person then they cannot be able to get up again to attack him later on in the film.”

GeneChing
09-20-2011, 09:56 AM
I didn't activate the hyperlinks at the bottom of this article so you'll just have to follow the link if you want to access those.

TIFF 2011: Yay! Martial-arts film The Raid wins Midnight Madness Award (http://blogs.montrealgazette.com/2011/09/20/tiff-2011-yay-martial-arts-film-the-raid-wins-midnight-madness-award/)
September 20, 2011. 12:48 am • Section: The Cine Files
Posted by:
Liz Ferguson

http://postmediamontreal.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/theraid-knife.jpeg?w=620

The Raid, which stars Indonesian martial-artist/actor Iko Uwais, and was directed by Welshman Gareth Huw Evans, won the Midnight Madness Audience Award at the Toronto International Film Festival, which wrapped up on Sunday, Sept. 18, 2011.

So, I’d like to know, when will it come to Montreal?

It would be really great if it showed up at the Festival de Nouveau Cinema, which runs from October 12-23, 2011.
(Pssssst…..I’m talking to you, Julien Fonfrede…)

To backtrack a bit: At the 2010 Fantasia Film Festival, I saw a great martial-arts action film from Indonesia, called Merantau. (Though it was then spelled Merentau in the Fantasia program.)

In the movie, a good-hearted young man from the countryside, (played by Iko Uwais, who really looked like a good-hearted young man) who was trained in the Indonesian martial art Pencat Silat, travels to the big city, planning to live with a relative. But there’s a vacant lot at the relative’s address and no one knows where he is.

Hardship, adventure, friendship and lotsa jaw-dropping fight scenes follow.

Well, even at a wide ranging festival like Fantasia, it’s not every day that we see movies from Indonesia, learn of a new martial art, and witness the birth of a new star. Iko Uwais did indeed have star quality.

Based on what I’ve read, The Raid has many, many more jaw-dropping fight scenes. With gunplay. And various sharp objects, etc., etc.
This time Uwais plays a policeman with the official, paying job of fighting and trying to capture dangerous crooks. (As opposed to just defending women and children from bad guys as a righteous good-deed-doer.)

The police go to a building full of such crooks, planning to arrest them, but the element of surprise is lost. Needless to say, besides being well-armed, the criminals are also skilled martial-arts fighters. Pandemonium ensues.

In Screen Daily, Mark Adams writes:
Indonesian action flick The Raid is a bone-crunching bit of brutally cool entertainment that really delivers in terms of all-out action thrills. Martial arts action films tend to be niche films in terms of their loyal fan-base, but this stylish and smart film could well find an audience savvy to its well-staged and extremely bloody mayhem.

The Hollywood Reporter has two stories about it. In one, David Rooney writes:
For a movie with very little downtime, The Raid is remarkably well modulated in its succession of extended set pieces. Full of dynamic physical stunts and imaginative death blows, the movie balances moments of intense quiet with fresh crescendos of visceral violence. This kind of relentless noise and carnage can be numbing in less skilled hands, but Evans, who also handled the rapid-fire editing, brings elegance and imagination to the outrageously charged action, as well as unflagging energy.
In addition to Matt Flannery’s nervy, hyper-agile camerawork, Evans’ principal allies are his superb fight choreographers, Uwais and Yayan Ruhian. The latter also plays a stringy-haired killer who doles out the movie’s most vicious punishments. . .

In another, Borys Kit writes:
“Wow, what a kick-off. Literally and figuratively.
The Raid opened the Midnight Madness portion of the Toronto International Film Festival early Friday, and if you love action movies, you cannot miss this movie.. . . The midnight screening had people cheering, wincing and shaking their heads in disbelief. . .
Fights took two to three months to choreograph and days to shoot. A climactic throw-down between three men in one room took six minutes of screen time but eight days to film. Another sequence, a blood-rushing hallway fight featuring batons and knives and machetes, took a full three days to shoot.
Yells of “Action!” then “Cut!” were sometimes followed by the cry “Medic!” although most injuries were small-scale (though by no means pain-free).”

At HorrorMovies.ca Tim Hannigan writes:
(Iko) Uwais is an incredible martial artist with plenty of charisma and screen presence to add to his insanely fast fighting style. Comparisons in the genre are unavoidable, but in my humble opinion Uwais is every bit as good as the greatest martial arts legends from Bruce Lee to Tony Jaa. I can’t wait to see what he does next, and hopefully it will not involve doing American films which waste his talent!
I read some criticism of the film that the premise was not original or that there is not much story to it. This is an action film, not “Citizen Kane”! If you want intricate story lines or bold original visions go somewhere else.

A review in Twitch by Ryland Aldrich has the great headline: The Raid Will Kick You in the Head and Make You Like It
Aldrich writes:
But let’s be honest – you’re gonna go see this move to see some fighting – and you will not be disappointed. . . You have simply never seen anything this awesome.

Kicking off TIFF’s Midnight Madness section in a big way, The Raid played to a feverish crowd. Gasps of delight were frequent and eager applause erupted after every set piece. This movie is an absolute crowd pleaser as Sony should discover when they release the film at a soon to be announced date. Let’s all hope they give the film the exposure it deserves as this is without a doubt the best action movie in decades.

Melissa Leong of The National Post talked to Gareth Evans and Iko Uwais when they were in Toronto,
Read the interview here.

For those who would rather watch than read, there’s a video interview with Evans at Tribute.ca.

Among other things, director Evans says that even when space is tight he wants the camera far enough away that all the moves can be seen well. (And appreciated!) He doesn’t want to be so close that viewers can’t tell what’s going on. Too bad some other directors can’t see the wisdom of that approach.

Evans was blown away by the warm reception he got at the Midnight Madness section of the Toronto International Film Festival. I think a bunch of us (us being Montrealers), should contact him to let him know that the audience at the Fantasia Film Festival is even warmer, wilder and crazier. At any and all hours of the day or night.

I have to say, it’s too bad that Sony wants to make a new soundtrack for the film. Do people there think it needs American music to find an audience?
Hope they don’t mess it up.

GeneChing
10-11-2011, 02:30 PM
I hope Iko doesn't adopt a western name like Tony or Jackie... or Ike. He should remain Iko.

Sitges 2011: THE RAID Review (http://twitchfilm.com/reviews/2011/10/sitges-2011-the-raid-review.php)
by Guillem Rosset, October 11, 2011 4:05 PM

http://twitchfilm.com/reviews/TheRaidSalesArt-thumb-300x445-25419.jpg
A couple of years ago, Gareth Evans and Iko Uwais - director and actor respectively - introduced a breath of fresh air to the world of martial arts cinema with Merantau, showing off the art of Indonesian Silat in the process. After the spectacular downfall of Tony Jaa it wasn't clear if someone would step up to occupy the seat as the new Asian action superstar. But now Iko Uwais, once again under the direction of Evans seems to pick up the challenge. The result of this new collaboration is The Raid, one of the best and most brutal action films I've seen in a long time.

In one of Jakarta's poorest neighborhoods there is is a building where even the police don't dare to go. Ruled by a powerful and feared crime lord, the building has become some kind of refuge for the most dangerous criminals in Indonesia. But an elite special force group has now received the order to end all this, to infiltrate the complex and bring down its ruler. As you can imagine the operation doesn't go according to the plan and suddenly all hell breaks lose. The police wind up trapped inside the building, with no possible way out and surrounded by killers and gangsters. There seems to be only one option: to fight all the way the top.

The film's setup is pretty straightforward. There are no unnecessary explanations nor does the director has any pretensions of overdressing the package. Gareth Evans knows very well what he wants to deliver and how he wants to do it. It's a simple plot, it features a wonderful setting for an action film and delivers just the necessary dramatic weight for the audience to care for the characters without getting ridiculous nor burdening the action.

And action there is, I can assure you. The film's got firefights, one on one fights, one on many fights, jawdropping stunts, you name it. One thing I found lacking in Merantau's fights was that they didn't feel as physical and raw as the likes of Ong Bak. That's not the case in The Raid: you'll feel every blow, thanks to the stunning choreography work and the good work of Evans capturing it on film. Iko Uwais has definitely stepped up to a new level, moving from young promise to consolidated star.

Being a martial arts flicks fan for a long time, it's been quite some time since I experienced something like this in a movie theater. Let's just hope this is only one more step in the career of this tandem, as I'm already eager for more. Tony Jaa may come to his feet once again soon, but for the time being I'm not worried. It's pretty clear that the action superstar seat is solidly covered.

doug maverick
10-11-2011, 05:37 PM
still film sounds really interesting and original!!!hell yes i wanna see it.

GeneChing
11-04-2011, 09:52 AM
The Raid Serbuan maut (http://www.filmbiz.asia/reviews/the-raid)
Indonesia
Contemporary action
2011, colour, 1.85:1, 100 mins
Directed by Gareth Huw Evans
The Raid
By Derek Elley
Mon, 24 October 2011, 09:20 AM (HKT)

In-your-face, grungy martial arts action is good but not very original. Genre events, some theatrical, plus strong ancillary.
Story

Jakarta, the present day. Rama (Iko Uwais) is a member of a SWAT team tasked with bringing down drugs lord Tama Riyadi (Ray Sahetapy) in a raid on the building he occupies in a slum area. For the past 10 years the building has been a no-go area for the police and is full of Riyadi's men, junkies, and assorted criminal trash. As he leaves his seven-months'-pregnant wife on the day in question, Rama says to his father, "I'll bring him back." The team is led by the experienced Jaka (Joe Taslim) and is under the command of grizzled police chief Lieutenant Wahyu (Pierre Gruno). The plan is to fight up through the building, via the 9th floor drugs factory, until the team reaches Riyadi's HQ on the 15th, where he controls operations with two sidekicks, crazed fighter Mad Dog (Yayan Ruhian) and operational brains Andi (Donny Alamsyah). All goes according to plan until some child spotters on the 5th floor sound the alarm, and the squad finds itself trapped on the 6th.

Review

After singlehandedly reintroducing the martial arts movie to Indonesian cinema with his second feature, Merantau Merantau (2009), local-based Welshman Gareth Huw EVANS ditches his interest in the archipelago's lore with the out-and-out action movie The Raid Serbuan maut, again showcasing Merantau's discovery, 28-year-old Iko UWAIS. Not called upon this time to do much more than what he does best, the boyish-faced Uwais acquits himself fine in the well-staged fights but is still overshadowed as a screen personality by the rest of the key cast (largely playing villains). As a wannabe Indonesian version of Thailand's Tony JAA ทัชชกร ยีรัมย์, Iwais still needs a vehicle tailored more closely to his metrosexual persona, and the answer may be something between the extremes of Merantau's spiritual/physical journey and the western-style brutality of The Raid.

The pared-down "plot" is no more than a SWAT team fighting its way floor-by-floor through a drug lord's dingy HQ — an idea that's basically a finale stretched to fill a whole feature. It's not original — Bruce LEE 李小龍's unfinished The Game of Death 死亡遊戲 (1978) travelled up a building, while the French cops-vs.-zombies thriller The Horde (La horde, 2009) travelled down through one — but that doesn't matter, as the idea is only a clothesline on which to hang a series of action sequences. For the first hour, the latter are good but nothing very special. The film finally comes alight when martial arts choreographer Yayan RUHIAN, playing a completely crazed sidekick of the drug lord, takes on SWAT team leader Jaka (played by local judo champion Joe TASLIM, from horror movie Karma Karma (2008)) in a ferocious fight.

Ruhian — who played the most interesting supporting character in Merantau but was robbed of his best fight scene in the film's shorter international cut — is the main reason for watching The Raid. When his character and Iwais' finally meet, it's a superb showdown on every level; but it's Ruhian, playing a rabid animal crossed with a fighting machine, who's the centre of attention, not Uwais. Other roles are standard cut-outs: soap-opera veteran Pierre GRUNO as a bent police boss, movie veteran Ray SAHETAPY as the slobbering drug lord, and Donny ALAMSYAH (9 Dragons 9 naga (2006), Merantau) as his operational sidekick.

On a technical level the film deliberately goes for a grungy, muddy look in Evans' regular d.p. Matt FLANNERY and Dimas Imam Subhono's photography, plus grey-blue, underlit sets by designer Moti D. Setyanto (also from the team of the very different-looking Merantau). Editing by Evans himself is fine, recalling the best bits of Merantau (the roof chase, the lift fight) and letting the martial arts choreography breathe rather than rely on fast cutting. The perfectly serviceable score is for some reason to be replaced for US distribution.

Though a US remake is under discussion, Evans is wisely concentrating on making a sequel instead. Having proved he can do a dirty, in-your-face action movie that plays to the western gallery, he'll hopefully come up with something more original and character-driven next time around. The film's Indonesian title means Death Invasion. We don't want to see the U.S remake. We want to see the Indonesian original. :rolleyes:

BakShaolinEC
11-04-2011, 11:21 AM
so i watched the trailer and this movie looks pretty hardcore. have to try and find this somewhere.

GeneChing
11-28-2011, 01:04 PM
Anyone seen this yet?

Welsh director of Kung Fu epics finds success with Asian audiences (http://www.walesonline.co.uk/showbiz-and-lifestyle/film-in-wales/2011/11/28/welsh-director-of-kung-fu-epics-finds-success-with-asian-audiences-91466-29852666/)
by Nathan Bevan, South Wales Echo
Nov 28 2011

A UNIVERSITY of Glamorgan graduate has emerged as the hottest young director in Asian cinema – and his latest martial arts epic has already been snapped up for a Hollywood remake.

Inspired after watching Bruce Lee videos in Aberdare, Gareth Evans shot his first shoestring-budgeted short film about samurais in the woods around Treforest.

“Yeah, I used some Japanese students I knew from the University of Glamorgan, but it wasn’t very good and we got some very strange looks,” said the 31-year-old media technology graduate from Hirwaun, near Merthyr Tydfil,

“My dad’s weekend treat to me as a kid would be to get me the latest Jackie Chan or some old Bruce Lee classic from the video rental van when it came up our street,” he added.

But it was upon landing a gig several years ago to direct a documentary on an Indonesian martial art called Pencak Silat that Evans realised where the future lay.

“I knew straight away it would look spectacular in a movie, so when I met Iko Uwais – whose Silat school I was filming at – we decided to make one together.”

A champion national fighter, Uwais became Evans’ secret weapon in bringing the discipline’s intense and complex style to the screen and the pair found great acclaim for their first celluloid effort, 2009’s Merantau. “That was about a coming-of-age tradition they have in Sumatra where young boys travel to a big city like Jakarta in order to make a name for themselves,” says the Valleys ex-pat.

And Evans’ latest movie The Raid has already wowed audiences on the international festival circuit, its distribution rights being bought by Sony Pictures after rough footage was unveiled at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

The tale of a special forces team in Jakarta staging an assault on an impenetrable high-rise safe-house for some of the world’s worst thugs and killers, Evans said it’s been influenced by western cinema classics like Die Hard.

“I’ve always loved stories involving small groups of people going up against overwhelming odds, and The Raid leaves the audience totally in the dark about which character is going to make it through to the end.”

Evans is currently preparing to film a sequel to The Raid, thereby relinquishing directorial duties on its upcoming US remake.

GeneChing
11-30-2011, 10:35 AM
Sounds like this is headed for theatrical release. Right on.

Sony Pictures Classics Releasing ‘The Raid’ (http://www.deadline.com/2011/11/sony-pictures-classics-releasing-the-raid/)
By MIKE FLEMING | Tuesday November 29, 2011 @ 3:32pm ESTTags: Gareth Evans, Linkin Park, Sony Pictures Classics, The Raid

EXCLUSIVE: Sony Pictures Classics has been set to release The Raid, the Gareth Evans-directed martial arts film that won the Midnight Madness Award at the recent Toronto Film Festival. It is also rumored to be en route to the upcoming Sundance Film Festival, by which time it will have a new soundtrack from Mike Shionda of Linkin Park, with Joseph Trapanese. For SPC, the film is a departure from its current awards contenders that include Take Shelter and Midnight In Paris, but the film was certainly one of the most buzzed-about films at Toronto for the industry crowd. It would have been a bidding battle at the festival, but the domestic distribution rights had been smartly collared by the Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions Group back at Cannes, a buy made on partial footage that also gave Sony the inside track on remake rights. The remake was placed at Screen Gems, and now SPC’s Tom Bernard and Michael Barker will release the original next spring. As for Evans, he’s going back to Jakarta to shoot a larger-scale film that incorporates the actors and storylines from The Raid.

GeneChing
11-30-2011, 03:24 PM
Wouldv'e been fun to see this in Jakarta.


Smashing Expectations With 'The Raid' (http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/entertainment/smashing-expectations-with-the-raid/479903)
Report Lisa Siregar | November 21, 2011
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/media/images/medium2/20111121182136609.jpg
The Indonesian action film The Indonesian action film 'The Raid' directed by Gareth Huw Evans was publicly screened in Indonesia for the first time on Sunday night in Jakarta. (JG Photo)
2:21am Nov 22, 2011

As the Indonesia International Fantastic Film Festival at the Blitzmegaplex in the Grand Indonesia mall came to a close on Sunday night, the audience erupted in cheers when “The Raid,” which is set in Jakarta, came on screen. It was the first time the Indonesian action film by Welsh director Gareth Huw Evans was publicly screened in Indonesia.

As Evans made his exit, a flock of fans cheered him, among them notable film producers and directors including Mira Lesmana, Riri Riza and Joko Anwar.

The 31-year-old director said he woke up that morning feeling nervous but was relieved after the day ended successfully — about 500 viewers filled two theaters.

“The Raid,” tentatively scheduled to be released in local cinemas in March or April next year, has received high marks from foreign film critics after winning the Audience Award at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

The hype has only grown since Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions acquired distribution rights for “The Raid” in the United States during the Cannes Film Festival. The film will get a Hollywood remake with Linkin Park frontman Mike Shinoda providing the music.

Evans has learned a lot since his first film “Merantau” with martial arts star Iko Uwais in 2009. In “Merantau,” Evans only used the traditional martial art of pencak silat as a cheeky addition to the story of West Sumatra’s tradition of leaving the homeland to seek success. In “The Raid,” Evans also uses martial arts to captivate the audience.

Evans met Iko when he was filming the documentary “Mystic Arts of Indonesia: Pencak Silat” in 2008. Iko was the student of the silat guru that was the subject of Evan’s film — Evans told his wife Maya Barack-Evans, who also serves as his producer, that Iko would be a rising star. A year later, Evans released “Merantau” starring Iko.

“In terms of acting, if you can’t act, you can’t,” said the director. “Iko can act. It’s just a matter of getting him into the right moment.”

In “The Raid,” an elite SWAT team raids a 30-story building in a slum, which is controlled by an influential drug lord. Choreographed by Iko and Yayan Ruhian, the action-packed fighting that ensues features kicks, stabbings, throat-slitting and point-blank gun shots. Along the way, Iko’s character is transformed from a gullible villager in the big city trying to save a girl to a SWAT team member who can take down more than seven men with his bare hands.

After “Merantau,” Evans struggled to make his next film, “Berandal” (“Scamp”), and spent more than a year wrangling with investors who were skeptical about spending $2 million to produce the film. Along the way, Evans decided to start working on “The Raid,” which only required a budget that was half of “Berandal.”

It was a worth while investment. The film was screened at the Cannes Film Festival, ultimately leading Sony Pictures to acquire its US distribution rights. Evans began shooting “The Raid” in May, finishing in late June, after which he rushed to make another film to be submitted at the Toronto International Film Festival.

“Before Toronto, I had only a solid two months to finish the post production for ‘The Raid,’ ” he said.

Evans declined to direct the Hollywood incarnation of “The Raid” because he feels he has already played his part by completing his version of the film. Consequently, he assumed the role of executive producer and promised he would give the new director complete freedom to remake it.

“I think what the film needed is a fresh mind to see if there’s more in the story to develop,” he said.

For Evans, winning recognition at big international film festivals has been critical to his career, and he believes continuing to participate will ultimately be beneficial in the future, despite the risks.

“It’s a very risky way to promote though, because if we get bad reviews, we need to find a way to sweep it out.” he said.

Because the market is unpredictable, Evans still thinks festivals are the best way to promote his films.

As a filmmaker, he is also worried for the future of Indonesian films, which have not attracted big box-office sales since “Laskar Pelangi” (“Rainbow Troops) in 2008.

“After ‘Laskar Pelangi,’ everyone was excited because we thought the market was there,” he said.

But as Evans has learned, good reviews don’t always translate into a large audience in Indonesian film market.

Evans grew up watching martial arts films with his father, a computer science teacher who is also a fan of the genre. As a boy, Evans was fascinated by Bruce Lee, and he and friends would reenact martial arts scenes from the movies in his backyard.

“We didn’t have a camera, so I’m glad there’s no evidence of that,” Evans said, laughing. “But at that point, I knew I was not good at acting.”

In college, Evans explored other aspects of filmmaking as a script writing major at the University of Glamorgan in Wales in 2003. He made a Japanese short film entitled “Samurai Monogatan” because martial art films were enjoying a resurgence.

As a child, Evans never actually thought he would grow up to make action films, yet now he is looking forward to directing “Berandal,” which he expects to begin shooting in mid-2012.

While “The Raid” progresses at a medium pace, “Berandal” will dive full speed into the action, with a “shocking” opening and nonstop action during the last 45 minutes of the film. He will also team up with Iko in his next movie.

After four years of working together, Evans, Iko and Yayan have built a strong rapport. Evans said he had finally learned to work with Iko in basic Indonesian, something he could not do while filming “Merantau.”

In the future, Evans said he also hopes to direct non-martial arts films, including dramas and musicals. “If there’s something I don’t want to do, it’s a comedy film,” he said. “I cannot imagine sitting during the premiere and hearing no one laughing.”

GeneChing
01-12-2012, 10:57 AM
Posted: Fri., Jan. 6, 2012, 4:00am PT
Evans: 'Raid' director discovers action inspiration abroad (http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118047969?refCatId=13)
10 Directors to Watch 2012: Gareth Evans
By Robert Koehler
http://images1.variety.com/graphics/photos/_specials-art2/10DIR_Gareth_Evans.jpg

Gareth Evans
Age: 31
Homebase: Jakarta
Inspired by: Sam Peckinpah (" I watched 'The Wild Bunch' with my father and it had a major impact"), John Carpenter ("?'Assault on Precinct 13' creates great tension on a limited budget"), John Woo, Takeshi Kitano and Takashi Miike.
Reps: Manager: Management 360 (Darin Friedman)

What, it's fair to ask, is a Welsh-born director doing in Jakarta making martial arts movies? Gareth Evans, whose "The Raid" became a sensation in Toronto Film Festival's Midnight Madness lineup and is making its U.S. bow at Sundance, says he's not really that surprised to find himself at the center of a revival of movies featuring the Indonesian silat fighting style.

"These movies are really in my blood. I watched tons of martial- arts movies over and over again growing up," says Evans, whose producer wife, R. Maya Barack-Evans, has Indonesian family roots. In 2007, Evans' fascination impelled him to venture to Indonesia to make a documentary about silat, which he had never before witnessed firsthand.

"It was a revelation," he recalls. "What so impressed me about silat was its fluidity, allowing for adaptability to every possible physical situation, whether a pair of fighters is in a tiny space or there are groups under massive attack."

While his previous feature, "Merantau," made a modest blip with martial-arts auds, Evans wanted to create an action showcase that would deliver the confrontations at a faster pace for higher impact. Originally, his plan was to make a silat actioner, "Berandal," but budget complications forced new plans, which led to "The Raid" and its story of a police invasion of a 15-story building ruled by a drug kingpin.

The practicalities of a contained location, plus inspiration from "Die Hard" (an Evans favorite), was just the combination to make "The Raid" possible. ("Berandal" is now planned as a sequel to "The Raid," with star and fight co-choreographer Iko Uwais returning.)

"We learned that the key to push the fighting to a new level, far beyond what's shown on Indonesian TV or in previous films, was to prepare, rehearse and storyboard months in advance," the director says. "While Hong Kong and Thai martial-arts movies are able to draw on years of experience and stage action sequences on the set during filming, we didn't have that, but I think we produced something that's extremely intense. Violent, yes. But never exploitative."
Go Silat! Silat is one of those styles, while not Chinese, that is generally acceptable with our readership.

GeneChing
01-24-2012, 10:47 AM
‘The Raid’ storms Sundance; director earns praise (http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/sundance/53343364-177/film-martial-arts-raid.html.csp)
By Vince horiuchi
The Salt Lake Tribune
First published Jan 23 2012 01:36PM
Updated Jan 23, 2012 09:37PM
http://www.sltrib.com/csp/cms/sites/dt.common.streams.StreamServer.cls?STREAMOID=3cEMX eG4imW55WtuG7m9us$daE2N3K4ZzOUsqbU5sYsO6_b6WQG6NSG kda1Rm0PcWCsjLu883Ygn4B49Lvm9bPe2QeMKQdVeZmXF$9l$4 uCZ8QDXhaHEp3rvzXRJFdy0KqPHLoMevcTLo3h8xh70Y6N_U_C ryOsw6FTOdKL_jpQ-&CONTENTTYPE=image/jpeg
The future of martial arts movies can be found in a white Welsh director.

Gareth Evans, the 31-year-old director of the Indonesian martial arts action movie "The Raid," which made its U.S. premiere at this week’s Sundance Film Festival, somehow found his way in Jakarta making martial arts films (which include the acclaimed action movie "Merantau").

"The Raid," about Indonesian police who storm the apartment fortress of a vicious drug lord, won the Midnight Madness award at the 2011 Toronto Film Festival last September and has since been picked up by Sony for theatrical distribution in March.

We caught up with the hot new director last week to see how he ended up in Indonesia and which directors have inspired him to make movies.

How did a man from Wales end up being a filmmaker in Indonesia making martial arts films?

My wife is Indonesian-Japanese and her family is based in Indonesia, and we were based in the U.K. for a while. She got me a job doing a directing gig on a documentary in Indonesia. And that was about [the martial art] Silat. I ended up becoming obsessed with martial arts. Throughout the process of shooting the documentary, I came away with a storyline called "Merantau," and I came away with Iko ["Merantau" and "The Raid" star Iko Uwais] and a choreography team. We kind of made a decision to move out to Jakarta once we moved there. And she’s [his wife] my boss. She owns the production company that makes the films, so I’ve got to keep her happy otherwise she’ll leave me and fire me.

This movie got a huge reaction at the Toronto Film Festival. How did that feel?

It was incredible. With Toronto, it was one of those things where we were able to completely surprise people because nobody had seen a second of the footage of the film and nobody knew what to expect. When I was doing post-production I was going like, "This could go either way." I wasn’t 100-percent confident about it before we screened it in Toronto. So to get that kind of reaction from the Midnight Madness crowd was just intense. It completely elevated the screening. It was a great feeling.

Has Hollywood called you?

Uh-huh. I’ve signed with [agents] Management 360. And also two days ago, I just signed with WME [William Morris Endeavor]. It’s in the cards. But my goal is to do a film in Indonesia and then a film internationally. I kind of want to be able to bounce back and forth.

Sony is distributing this film and there’s already been word that Sony wants to do an American remake. Are you going to be involved?

I’m involved as an EP [executive producer]. My guys are doing the fight choreography for the film as well, so they have more direct involvement in the film.

How do you feel about that? Are you excited that they want to remake it or do you feel in some way it kind of diminishes your film? What’s wrong with the film that you made?

For me, there’s benefits to it. There’s only positives to it. If people love the remake, they will go see the original. If people don’t like the remake, they’ll still go see the original. It brings a lot more awareness to my version of the film as well. And there were things I wanted to do with this one that I couldn’t because of budget restrictions, so there were certain moments I had to hold back from what I really wanted to do with the film. So hopefully whomever they get to direct can come to it with a fresh pair of eyes and do all the things I wish I could have done. It would be cool to see what they do with it.

What action movies and directors inspired you the most growing up?

Jackie Chan, Sam Peckinpah, John Woo. I love all of those films with extreme gunplay and clear, crisp choreography. If you look at "Hard Boiled" or "The Wild Bunch" or "Police Story," "Armour of God," "Project A" — they’re all classics in the genre. The focus on a white director is getting tiresome, but I'm still eager to see this.

Follow the link below for a fight clip.

Exclusive 'The Raid' Clip Will Make You Tired Just Watching It (http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2012/01/19/the-raid-exclusive-clip/)

Posted 1/19/12 12:39 pm ET by Kevin P. Sullivan in Sundance 2012, Video

If you've heard anything about "The Raid," you've probably heard all the right things. Whenever the Indonesian martial arts film has screened, including Midnight Madness at the Toronto International Film Festival, it has left rave reviews in its wake.

We have an exclusive clip from "The Raid" called "Four-On-One," and it's called that for a good reason.

Now outfitted with a new score, courtesy of Linkin Parks' Mike Shinoda, "The Raid" is poised to take Sundance by storm.

In the film, an elite team of police enters a rundown apartment building in order to break up the safe house hiding some of area's worst criminals. After word of the raid prematurely reaches the bad guys, the cops are left stranded in a building filled with killers and no choice but to fight their way out.

And by fight their way out, we mean battle four guys with machetes, and that's only the start of it.

Be sure to check out the red band trailer, which we featured shortly after "The Raid" had its TIFF premiere. As you might guess from the clip above, the trailer does not shy away from some awesome violence, so it might be best to wait until after work to watch it.

"The Raid" is set for US release on March 23.

Jimbo
01-24-2012, 11:11 AM
I also think the focus on him being Welsh has gotten old. I did like Merantau, so I'm also looking forward to this one.

GeneChing
02-27-2012, 12:53 PM
The Raid: Redemption Official Trailer #1 - Martial Arts Action Movie (2011) HD (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0hSL3a_kaw)

Also found the source of that Hollywood remake story:

Screen Gems in Negotiations to Remake 'The Raid' (Exclusive) (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/screen-gems-negotiations-remake-raid-237876)
The Indonesian action movie recently won Toronto Film Festival's Midnight Madness sidebar's audience award.
3:53 PM PDT 9/20/2011 by Borys Kit

The Raid, the Indonesian action movie that is fresh off winning the Midnight Madness sidebar’s audience award at TIFF, is getting the Hollywood remake treatment.

Screen Gems is in negotiations on a remake, a move made possible for the label since sister arm Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions picked up North American distribution rights to the film during the Cannes Film Festival. The initial deal called for Sony to have an exclusive negotiating period and right of refusal on a remake in its deal with XYZ Films, the makers of the original.

The movie was the only Midnight Madness flick that already had a distributor when it premiered at TIFF’s Midnight Madness, the late-night screening series that showcases genre flicks. The movie kicked off the series and was a sensation from the get-go, becoming one of the talks of the festival.

The movie tells the story of a SWAT team that becomes trapped in a tenement run by a ruthless mobster, armed with two highly violent martial arts killers and an army of machete-swinging, machine gun-toting dealers and thugs.

One of the buzz-generating aspect of the movie is the Indonesian fighting form called silat that were put into it by writer-director Gareth Evans, who just signed with Management 360.

How this unique aspect would be handled by a remake is not clear although Screen Gems is aware the unique fighting style is one of the movie’s strengths.

The company is hoping to tie down a filmmaker shortly though it will not be Evans, who opted out of repeating himself and will focus on making a sequel that he hopes to shoot in February

Screen Gems has tackled remakes of foreign films in the past, most successfully with Quarantine, a horror movie starring Jennifer Carpenter which was a remake of the Spanish scary movie Rec.

doug maverick
02-27-2012, 01:02 PM
i think if its handled by a small distributor like screen gems, it will do well...this movie was shot for under a million dollars american, it was shot on hd, and they did even use a full frame camera like the red or even the canon 5d...they used a 4:3 camera, with a lens adapter so im curious to see what it looks like all blown up.

GeneChing
02-28-2012, 10:28 AM
...as for the U.S. Box, well, we'll see, right? America is still not very accepting of films with an Asian male lead.


Gareth Evans’ Martial Arts Film ‘The Raid’ Picks Up Two Awards at The Jameson Dublin International Film Festival (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/gareth-evans-martial-arts-film-the-raid-ireland-awards-295648)
7:42 AM PST 2/28/2012 by Stuart Kemp

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/sites/default/files/2012/01/The_Raid.jpg
Movie starring martial artist Iko Uwais makes off with the audience award and the Dublin Film Critics Circle Best Film prize.

LONDON – Gareth Evans’ martial arts film The Raid, starring Indonesian martial artist Iko Uwais, scored with both the audience and critics alike at this year’s Jameson Dublin International Film Festival.

The movie, already a big hit at festivals including the people’s choice award during last year’s Toronto Film Festival, picked up the audience award and the Dublin Film Critics Circle Best Film prize.

Other nods dished out at the end of the Irish festival included a best actress plaudit for Greta Gerwig for her turn in Whit Stillman’s Damsels in Distress.

This best screenplay nod went to Joseph Cedar’s Footnote while Nuala: A Life and Death was named best Irish film by the Dublin Film Critics Circle.

Michael Fuith took home the best actor award for his role in Markus Schleinzer’s Michael.

Nuri Bilge Ceylan won the best director plaudit for Once Upon A Time In Anatolia.

Al Pacino was awarded the Volta by president Michael D. Higgins for his outstanding contribution to film.

Guests turning out for the festival, celebrating its 10th year, included Pacino, Martin Sheen, Glenn Close, Mark Wahlberg, Michael Madsen, Stillman, Kenneth Lonergan, Agnieszka Holland and Marjane Satrapi.

GeneChing
03-07-2012, 11:10 AM
Indonesian Action Flick – The Raid is Instant Classic (http://www.asianweek.com/2012/03/05/indonesian-action-flick-the-raid-is-instant-classic/)
By Ryan Baladad
– March 5, 2012Posted in: Art, Arts-Entertainment

It is rarely said about movies, but The Raid is an instant classic. Whether anyone is a film buff, an action junkie or simply wants mindless entertainment, this Indonesian film is a must see. Filmed with bold, readable English subtitles, The Raid is a brilliant action flick from any angle you view it.

It was chosen as an official selection at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival, receiving much praise, and will be featured at this year’s Sundance and SXSW film festivals.
Director and writer, Gareth Huw Evans is an up-and-coming filmmaker, and with the help of The Raid, hopes to bring the Indonesian martial art, Pencak Silat, to the world stage.

He teams up again with Iko Uwais, actor and fight choreographer from Evan’s previous film, Merantau. Uwais plays the lead role, Rama, a rookie in the local SWAT team. Rama and his colleagues set out on a deadly covert mission to capture Tama, played by Ray Sahetaphy, an infamous and ruthless crime lord, in his own 15-story tenement.

Prior to the mission, the team lead, Jaka, played by Joe Taslim, briefs his men and voices his hopes that no seats will later be empty. It is an emotionally-charged scene reminiscent of the military troops on D-Day during World War II.

The team begins to infiltrate each room floor by floor in the dilapidated deathtrap with a stealthy success…until a spotter sees them. Instantly, the spotter triggers a blaring alarm that alerts Tama, who then via a speaker system offers free rent to tenants who can exterminate the recent infestation.

From that point forward, Tama shuts down the lights and a Pandora’s Box of threats is unleashed, including snipers, squads of gunmen with automatic rifles, machete-wielding maniacs and other random ruckus. It will make audiences think if the SWAT team will ever survive and they will want to see the outcome.

The Raid has a compelling amount of martial arts in tight spaces. Think hallways and apartment living rooms. Intense imagery is found throughout the film and at times the attacks are close up, graphic and realistic.

Uwais displays his fighting skill with such deadly grace. Consider Uwais as the next martial arts star, ranking up there with Jet Li (Fist of Legend, Fearless) or Tony Jaa (The Ong Bak trilogy).

As the SWAT team tries to survive, it is revealed that things are not as it seems. Aside from the non-stop action, the plot unfolds accordingly with a few twists, leaving audiences content with the outcome.

Listen closely for the original works of a collaboration with Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park and composer Joseph Trapanese, who recently worked with Daft Punk on the Tron: Legacy score. The duo definitely helped set the tone for each scene of the movie.

Take note that The Raid will infiltrate limited theaters in the Bay Area on March 23, 2012. It is not yet rated. Running time: 100 minutes

March 23 openings
San Francisco: Metreon, Sundance Kabuki
Berkeley: Shattuck
Mountain View: Century 16
Pleasant Hill: Cinearts
San Jose: Santana Row
San Rafael: Regency

April 13 openings
Union City: Century 25
Milpitas: Century 20 Great Mall

I called Iko as 'the next martial arts star' back with Merantau

...it's really about Iko's choreography. He's the new young turk to watch in martial arts films. Silat is an exciting style for film that blends some kung fu sensibilities with other Pac Rim styles like Muay Thai and Kali. I don't even know how to properly pronounce Iko Uwais yet, but I will soon.

doug maverick
03-07-2012, 11:40 AM
...as for the U.S. Box, well, we'll see, right? America is still not very accepting of films with an Asian male lead.

accept in martial arts oriented action films like this one...unfortunately

Jimbo
03-07-2012, 02:19 PM
...as for the U.S. Box, well, we'll see, right? America is still not very accepting of films with an Asian male lead.

That's an understatement.

Like doug says, except in MA-type films, or I would add, Asian-themed episodes of TV shows.

IMO someone like Russell Wong should have been a big mainstream star. He could have been, too, but for his being Asian. Instead, he ended up having to take increasingly stereotyped roles in worse and worse movies. He's but one example, though admittedly there are comparatively few Asian-American male actors.

GeneChing
03-23-2012, 11:17 AM
THE RAID (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=1033) by Greg Lynch Jr.

enoajnin
03-26-2012, 09:32 AM
The Raid had a per screen average of $15,786 on fourteen screens. The only film that had a higher per screen average this weekend was, of course, Hunger Games.

GeneChing
03-27-2012, 09:29 AM
Linkin Park's Mike Shinoda Rocks on to New Challenge: 'The Raid: Redemption' Film Score (Q&A) (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/*******-machine/mike-shinoda-raid-redemption-linkin-park-joe-trapanese-gareth-evans-302982)
The songwriter and keyboardist talks about tackling Asian stereotypes and taking advantage of serendipitous career choices as he premieres his first film score.
4:29 PM PDT 3/21/2012 by Todd Gilchrist

In a little more than a decade, Linkin Park has racked up more than 30 credits contributing songs or other pieces of music to a variety of movies and television programs. But frontman Mike Shinoda has never been satisfied with just one outlet for his creativity, and his solo work on the Fort Minor album, along with an assortment of remixes and productions for other artists, has led perhaps inevitably back to another medium in which the band has experienced so much success: movies.

Working with Tron: Legacy orchestrator Joe Trapanese, Shinoda created not just a soundtrack but a full-blown score for The Raid: Redemption, writer-director Gareth Evans’ epic action thriller about an Indonesian SWAT team that gets trapped in a drug dealer’s fortresslike tenement building. As the musician continues to expand his repertoire, Shinoda talked with The Hollywood Reporter about making the transition into scoring movies and taking on new challenges.

The Hollywood Reporter: How did you initially get involved with this project, and how much did you know about the movie beforehand?

Mike Shinoda: With Linkin Park being placed in so many films, I've gotten a few offers to get involved in scoring before. A lot of the stuff really hasn't been my cup of tea; generally it's like: "Hey, we love Linkin Park. We've got this composer on board, but we want to put your name on the poster, and we want you to put heavy rock guitars on the score." That's really not very inspiring for me, and I'm not at a place in my career where I feel like doing that kind of thing gets me anywhere. But I got approached by Sony, and the guy basically said, "We’re fans of your Fort Minor stuff [and] some of the remixes you've done -- would you want to score this film?" They basically were saying they were going to trust me with the whole thing. What they were talking about is a couple of pieces of work that I did for fun – the Fort Minor album and the remixes, I basically did those on afternoons hanging out in my studio and started messing around with something and turned it into something that I ended up putting out. So I figured if I could do that and get some experience with a film, then it'd be a great opportunity -- and it did end up being exactly that.

THR: Coming into an Indonesian film, and you being Japanese-American, was there any conscious thought about the idea of being an Asian-American working on an Asian action film?

Shinoda: That's funny. I know there was a conversation at one point where we said for the most part we're going to try to avoid traditional instruments, because I'm not that familiar with them and even if I read on Wikipedia that this particular instrument is the most popular traditional Indonesian instrument, it's still like I don't have an expertise in that instrument and I'm not going to try and use it in a clunky way. So we basically tried to stay away from that for the most part. There's a couple of scenes in the film where we went with some very traditional sounding or organic sounding drums, I think those reference points do have a kind of Taiko [drumming] kind of feel. But in no way did I try and bring some kind of Indonesian musical sound; in fact, I avoided it. Joe and I both avoided it because it's not us. It was out of respect for the people. But I feel like for me, we tour all over the world and we have actually a really fantastic fan base in Indonesia and I know it's pretty clear to them that I'm not Indonesian.

THR: Sure, but it seems like Hollywood isn't always sensitive to the differences between Asian cultures.

Shinoda: I feel like people who make that mistake might benefit from an awareness of the website Disgrasian. It’s one of my favorite Asian-centric American websites, and they constantly make fun of Hollywood's tendency to kind of mix and match Asian culture.

THR: How challenging was it to make the transition from realizing that certain pieces of music you had created were good for certain kinds of sequences to actually creating them specifically for those kinds of sequences?

Shinoda: I did a little piece of scoring for an independent that Rob Dyrdek put together called Street Dreams, and I did some other things that nobody will ever see. And then eventually when Linkin Park did the Transformers movies, on the second one we got to get involved on the score in that one, and I think that got me excited -- it was a little taste of what it could be like. And so when I first got involved, I told Gareth that I wanted to approach it more like a score; I didn't want to try and just make songs and have somebody else edit them together, which I know is a possibility. He seemed to be really receptive to that, and in fact at the end of the process he said that was one of the moments when he got the most confidence about the relationship because I intended to approach it in a way that was complementary to what he had done. I brought Joe Trapanese on board, who was Daft Punk's scoring partner on the TRON soundtrack, because I love what he did on that movie and I really thought that bringing somebody with a more traditional background would be an educational opportunity for me. He not only [taught] me about simple technical stuff like the workflow, but also just we could provide a point of reference for one another -- like are we being true enough to scoring the film without getting too distracting in the music, are we being bold enough with the music that it's not just a boring generic score, stuff like that. I think that the collaboration really benefitted all of us.

THR: Did you have any concerns about joining the film with another score already created?

Shinoda: Absolutely. I think that was the scariest moment, going to Sundance when the film debuted with my score in it, because I knew that it had already won awards, there was a ton of buzz about the movie, and people were going to Sundance just to see this movie. Some of them had already seen it with the other score and it would be awful if people had written reviews saying "this movie is great, we've seen it for the second or third time, they ruined the score though." Luckily I haven't seen anybody say that. It may be out there, but I haven't seen it. But I didn't go into it trying to compare what I was going to do with their thing; we basically started from a clean slate, got a few notes from the music supervisor at Sony that were basic ideas that Gareth wanted to make sure happened, but for the most part he was very open to what we wanted to come with. I mean he was a dream scenario in the sense that we had a lot of artistic freedom to come up with what should go on in each scene.


continued next post

GeneChing
03-27-2012, 09:30 AM
THR: how did you look at this in terms of what people might be expecting?

Shinoda: I have a background in piano -- in fact, that's where I started out. I spent ten years playing classical piano, and that was what led to keyboards and eventually to production and to Linkin Park. I remember transitioning out of piano after about 12 years of doing it and I had told my piano teacher I loved playing piano but I hate playing these classical pieces – “I hate homework, having to take home these things and learn them.” They were not my favorite kind of music, and all I saw myself doing was basically learning all the loops on my favorite rap songs and playing that on the piano for my friends. And my piano teacher was a saint; she was so sweet about it and said "I honestly can't teach you that, and it's okay if you want to quit lessons. But here's what you should do -- buy a keyboard and learn what that's about and I can try and help you find another teacher if you want." Jumping forward, there's a balance to be aware of in this movie where I wanted it to sound like me, to sound what they probably expected, and also to surprise people, just to keep it fresh and keep people on their toes. So as we went along there are definitely moments where sounds that I think you would expect to pop up, and there are these other moments that just provides variety in the score and keeps people guessing.

THR: Now natural was your movement towards this opportunity? Was it sort of a serendipitous convergence of events, or did it sort of come out of the blue?

Shinoda: It's a little bit of all of that. On one hand I've always loved the exercise of making music to fit something visual, and we joked about this score [being] almost like reverse engineering of a music video. You've got the dance on the screen -- the fight scene is a carefully choreographed number and we've got to make music that they're dancing to. And we found that there is actually a rhythm to a lot of the scenes that would ebb and flow. And once we found that rhythm, the score really locked into the action. For me it's just always something that's kind of lingered in the back of my head. I remember being a little kid sitting in the living room with my brother and some friends from around the neighborhood, and I would sit at the piano and as they were running around the room doing different things and being silly, acting out, I would actually play the score for it -- the music that went along with it. So if they're creeping along the side of the wall, I'm making this mysterious detective music or whatever it may be. And I think it just kind of sits there in the back of your head and when the moment arrives then we might be able to seize it and do something with it, then you jump. For me with this score too it's the right kind of movie -- I felt like I wanted to go into it and give it 100%. I'm not just going to say yes to this and then just kind of half-ass it, but at the same time if I make some mistakes along the way, this is the place to do it. And I found that I would love to do some more scoring and I really do enjoy the process and I enjoy what happened here. But I think that, to be fair, the next thing that I do probably won't be an action film.

THR: Have you lined up any participation in the sequel to The Raid, Berandal?

Shinoda: I'm actually not aware of how far through he is, so we haven't really talked about it. The answer at this point would be no.

THR: Where do you feel like you're at in your career now – is this a fully new direction to go into, or do you look at this as a digression from your Linkin Park and Fort Minor efforts?

Shinoda: I don't think this is a sign of any kind of infidelity; this isn't like I'm restless with Linkin Park and I needed to stretch out and do something else. We have moments with the band where I have an opportunity to dive into something else and I enjoy having my hands in a lot of different things, as evidenced by all the other random weird stuff that I've done along the way from art shows to projects with other artists. As a creative person you just get an idea in your head, and sometimes you just can't shake it off. When it comes to the scoring, I intend to have a healthy balance between that and the stuff that I do with Linkin Park. We're in the studio right now with the band making a record which I'm really really happy with, and I feel like the best part about it is the things that I do that are not Linkin Park, they all complement one another. As I finished up the score for The Raid I realized some things about the working process that were so useful and they were great tools that I then took to the studio with the band and I loosened up our workflow. With The Raid, you just kind of go down the rabbit hole and you don't really check in as often. With our band we tend to check in every week or even more often, and sometimes that disrupts the creative process. So I told the guys about that and we started putting it in place, and it has great results. I think it's healthy, at least for me.I'm a huge fan of Indonesian gamelan. Traditional music would have been interesting, but it's a hard call not having seen the film yet.

Jimbo
03-31-2012, 09:05 PM
I really enjoyed The Raid: Redemption.

In Merantau, I thought that Iko Uwais looked a bit like 'Tony Jaa Lite' in the MA department, although he was a better actor. Such a comparison was inevitable. In The Raid, it's cool to see how his choreagraphy has grown and developed since then. He and his stunt team have fully come into their own, with their own distinctive (and brutal) style. IMO, the team of Gareth Evans and Iko Uwais have far surpassed the quality of Tony Jaa's films. The fights in The Raid are more about inflicting extreme damage, as opposed to showing off super-athleticism/XMA/Parkour-style fights.

For an early show, I was surprised at the number of people in the audience...not even half-full, but being an early show and a subtitled film, a good number. And a pretty good audience response, too. Which does not happen at the movies too often anymore.

If I have a complaint about the film at all, it's the often shaky camerawork, probably done to enhance the sense of tension and chaos. Sometimes it's shaky even when there is no action going on. Also, why would such a powerful (and presumably rich) crime boss choose such a ****hole of a building as his base? But those are small things. This is probably the best action film to come out in years.

@ Gene:
There's no sword fights, but plenty of knife and machete fighting.

10/10.

doug maverick
04-01-2012, 08:22 PM
I really enjoyed The Raid: Redemption.

In Merantau, I thought that Iko Uwais looked a bit like 'Tony Jaa Lite' in the MA department, although he was a better actor. Such a comparison was inevitable. In The Raid, it's cool to see how his choreagraphy has grown and developed since then. He and his stunt team have fully come into their own, with their own distinctive (and brutal) style. IMO, the team of Gareth Evans and Iko Uwais have far surpassed the quality of Tony Jaa's films. The fights in The Raid are more about inflicting extreme damage, as opposed to showing off super-athleticism/XMA/Parkour-style fights.

For an early show, I was surprised at the number of people in the audience...not even half-full, but being an early show and a subtitled film, a good number. And a pretty good audience response, too. Which does not happen at the movies too often anymore.

If I have a complaint about the film at all, it's the often shaky camerawork, probably done to enhance the sense of tension and chaos. Sometimes it's shaky even when there is no action going on. Also, why would such a powerful (and presumably rich) crime boss choose such a ****hole of a building as his base? But those are small things. This is probably the best action film to come out in years.

@ Gene:
There's no sword fights, but plenty of knife and machete fighting.

10/10.

when i saw this here in nyc the theatre was jammed packed...on a tuesday...in nyc...thats impossible...the hunger games wasnt even half full. this movie was awesome...best action film ive seen in years, what makes this movie superior to the baa raam ewe films is two things, good acting and good story....which none of the tony jaa films or the other baa raam ewe films seem to have, the one exception being chocolate and even that story was eh. as for the action....it was top notch hollywood couldnt improve on it...my only problem was the hand to hand combat, because every fighter used the same style and tactics. i like it when each fighter has his or her own flavor. this was certainly an 8 out 10...im shaving two points because of the hand to hand. as for the american remake as long as they dont put ryan reynolds in it..ill see it.

GeneChing
04-02-2012, 09:22 AM
There's no sword fights, but plenty of knife and machete fighting. Machetes totally count as swords. ;)

GeneChing
04-06-2012, 09:35 AM
April 3, 2012, 12:06 PM SGT
“The Raid” Takes Indonesian Box Office By Storm (http://blogs.wsj.com/searealtime/2012/04/03/the-raid-takes-indonesian-box-office-by-storm/)
By Ahmad Pathoni

The action movie that has American reviewers raving lately isn’t a Hollywood product or a Chinese martial arts extravaganza. It’s a low-budget Indonesian action flick titled “The Raid: Redemption.”

The Raid, which cost only about $1 million to produce, has taken international film critics and audiences by storm since it won the Midnight Madness Award at the Toronto International Film Festival in September. It has earned an impressive 85 percent rating on rottentomatoes.com, a U.S. website dedicated to movie reviews.

The film’s international success has also provided a breath of fresh air for Indonesia’s cinema, which is notorious for producing mainly poor-quality horror movies with bizarre and sexually suggestive titles such as “The Virgin Ghost’s Boyfriend” and “Dancing Ghost in the Bathroom.”

“This is the first time in history that an Indonesian movie has been screened in theaters in the United States, Canada and Australia. We are extremely proud,” said The Raid producer Ario Sagantaro. The Raid is due to hit U.K. theaters in May.

The Los Angeles Times called it “a slam-bang, knock-your-socks-off action bonanza” while the New York Post dubbed it an action lover’s dream par excellence. Salon.com had The Raid as its Pick of the Week on March 23, calling it “a dazzling martial-arts sensation,” while Minneapolis Star Tribune declared that the movie “is a kick that will leave your head ringing for days.”

The movie has also proved to be a sensation in Indonesia since it began screening in local theaters on March 23. It was directed by Welsh-born Gareth Evans, who first came to Indonesia four years ago to do a documentary on a local martial-arts form known as pencak silat, and is married to an Indonesian woman of Japanese heritage. While making the documentary, Mr. Evans met Iko Uwais, The Raid’s main protagonist, a silat athlete who was working as a driver for a telecommunications company.

The film follows a SWAT-like police squad on a mission to take out a cold-blooded drug lord Tama (Ray Sahetapy), who holes himself in a rundown Jakarta apartment building with his henchmen. The team soon encounters resistance from gun-toting and machete-wielding criminals loyal to Tama, setting the stage for brutal gunfights and stunning displays of bare-hand battles featuring pencak silat. Iko Uwais plays Rama, a rookie officer who has to finish the mission after his comrades fall one by one.

“The film is so brutal it made me squirm in my seat throughout. The fighting and the cast are top-notch,” said action movie fan Budi Heryana after watching the film in a Jakarta cinema.

Hesti Purwaningsih, a production coordinator at Merantau Films, which produced The Raid, said 250,000 people had watched the movie over its first four days – a great turnout for an Indonesian film.

It’s not clear if The Raid will be able to match Indonesia’s biggest blockbuster hit of all time, Laskar Pelangi (Rainbow Troops), which drew 4.6 million cinemagoers in 2008.

Mr. Evans wrote in his Twitter feed that he was finishing the script for the sequel to The Raid, “expanding the story and ramping up the action a bit.”

Industry observers said The Raid’s success should raise the international profile of Indonesian cinema. In recent years, a new breed of filmmakers has emerged in Indonesia, bringing in fresh ideas and technical know-how, but they are still struggling to break into the international scene commercially.

“I think The Raid shows that Indonesian cinema is catching up with countries whose film industries are already established. It has put us on the global map,” said Muhammad Abduh Aziz, a film producer who is also the secretary general of Jakarta Arts Council.

Indonesia, a country of 240 million people, produced only 82 films last year, and with only about 660 theater screens nationwide, mostly in big cities, there’s a huge untapped market, Mr. Aziz said.

“In (less developed) eastern Indonesia, cinemas are virtually non-existent,” Mr. Aziz said. “The government should provide incentives for business people to open cinemas and finance film productions and distribution,” he said.

He described Indonesia’s current crop of producers and filmmakers as gamblers who are mainly driven by their passion for movies.

“There’s a lot of uncertainty and risks in making films in Indonesia,” he said. Now I really want to see Dancing Ghost in the Bathroom.

GeneChing
04-25-2012, 10:35 AM
Nothing bumps up martial arts better than a good movie.

Indonesian film may help revive local martial art (http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/25/entertainment-us-indonesia-film-martial-idUSBRE83O0FW20120425)
By Lenita Sulthani
JAKARTA | Wed Apr 25, 2012 7:52am EDT

(Reuters) - An Indonesian martial arts film with fast fight sequences has smashed domestic box office records and become the first Indonesian flick to break into the U.S. box office, also winning acclaim at international film festivals.

Now the movie's director hopes the film's success will breathe new life into Pencak Silat, the Indonesian martial art it showcases - and one whose followers are dwindling at home.

"The Raid: Redemption" was released worldwide on March 28 and reached number 11 in the U.S. box office at the start of April, drawing an audience of more than 2 million. At home, it has drawn an audience of more than 1 million, a spectacular amount for the local movie industry.

"It's a film that can help promote the idea of people knowing Silat all around the world," said Gareth Evans, a filmmaker from Wales who wrote and directed the movie after falling in love with Pencak Silat several years ago.

"So if through this film there are audience members in the U.S., UK or France, or anywhere else in the world, that suddenly start to learn more about Silat, or people that want to learn to actually be able to perform Silat, then we've done our job."

Pencak Silat has more than 150 variations in style across Indonesia, utilizing hand and foot movements. Evans said he was impressed by the beauty of how Silat athletes move into an attack, as well as the brutality behind it, but its popularity has diminished among younger Indonesians.

The movie, called simply "The Raid" in Indonesia, tells the story of an Indonesian SWAT team sent to capture a crime lord who lives and works in a multi-storey tower block.

It stars Pencak Silat master and former champion Iko Uwais as a police chief and Yayah Ruhiyan, who has served as an international Pencak Silat referee, as a criminal mastermind. The two co-choreographed fight scenes.

Shot in three months with a budget of a million dollars, the movie garnered rave reviews from international critics, including a Midnight Madness award at the Toronto Film Festival, and was showcased at the Sundance Film Festival as well as in Spain, Italy and Dublin.

Critics praised the film for its non-stop action and meticulous choreography, though Evans said he and producer Ario Sagantoro had done nothing innovative and used the same style as Hong Kong action movies from the 1980s. Some 90 percent of the movie was shot indoors.

"That was the only rule, that we wanted to make a film that we wanted to watch. So we weren't thinking 'Oh well, maybe we could do this at the box office, or maybe we can sell to this country and this country,'" Evans said.

"We knew we had to sell internationally, but we had no idea how we would perform, we had no idea how people would respond. Everything that has happened since Toronto has been a bonus."

Evans started directing Asian movies before he left his home country, making "Samurai Monogatari" in 2003 as a film school project. He came to know Pencak Silat while shooting a documentary five years ago.

He and Sagantoro have also made "Merantau," which was popular locally before going to international film festivals.

A graphic novel version of "The Raid" has been launched to capitalize on its popularity, and a second installment is currently in development. It will showcase Pencak Silat again, but in a bigger and more ambitious scale by taking the story to the streets to "blow up Jakarta," said producer Sagantoro.

Fans in Indonesia approved of the movie, which was picked up by Sony Pictures after its original release for local theatres.

"I like the action and the story. This is good for the film industry in Indonesia," said 15-year-old Caca Anisa. "I am proud of it."

GeneChing
04-27-2012, 09:32 AM
Remember in my post on Merantau (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?p=1067837#post1067837)? "...it's really about Iko's choreography. He's the new young turk to watch in martial arts films." I told you. :cool:

Delicious ultraVI. The Raid doesn't mess around. Just pure unadulterated action, barely inhibited by the distractions of plot. It's like fight scene porn - absurdly entertaining if you like fight scenes (and who here doesn't?). Iko delivers. It's great to see a Muslim hero. My only criticism is it suffers from some some shaky camera work which either spoils great choreography or covers a multitude of sins. Machete and ratchet fights. Knife fights. Gun fights. Chair fights. Ass kicking from the get go.

See it in the theaters if you can. Support it. It's great to see a subtitled martial arts film do so well theatrically.

Looking forward to Berandal (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?p=1067838).

GeneChing
05-09-2012, 03:50 PM
The last post was the peak of the US distribution according to BoxOfficeMojo. It's down to 126 houses here now. It managed to do $4,004,549 domestically to date Not too shabby. It's still playing in San Jose and Emeryville here in the Bay Area.

The Raid: Gareth Evans Attacks the Block (http://www.impactonline.co/news/742-the-raid-gareth-evans-attacks-the-block)

As The Raid (Redemption) gets ready to continue its international acclaim with a UK release, Impact talks exclusively to action director Gareth Evans about channelling his inner-Peckinpah…

9 May 2012

While it’s undeniable that the Avengers is currently eating up the cinematic spotlight in astonishing box-office, it’s equally clear that the film has merely kick-started what should be one of the biggest action seasons in recent memory. There seems no better way to follow up a mega-budget juggernaut than with a project being equally lauded for its amazing action content but which was done on a considerably smaller budget.

Yet The Raid (aka The Raid: Redemption as it will be known internationally – yet another example of title tweakage this year!) has already generated amazing reviews for its hands-on, gritty, claustrophobic action as a police team work their way through a Jakarta apartment block facing intense confrontations and close-quarter combat with a heavily-armed gangster and his henchmen. Already being called Ong Bak meets Die Hard in western shorthand reviews, The Raid is not just aimed at a genre-specific martial-arts crowd, but an introduction to a more classic, solid alternative to CGI-dominated movies.

In 2009, after almost a decade of producing acclaimed shorts, Welsh-born director Gareth Evans created an impressive industry calling-card with Merantau. The Indonesian film, also starring Iko Uwais, focussed on the martial art of Silat and the film began to pick up great reviews and attention from international festivals. It was inevitable that Evans would be given the opportunity to expand on that cult success. However from an early point, the buzz about his next film, to be released in the UK next week, was growing. Perhaps as an alternative to expected blockbusters, perhaps as just an expert slice of classic action, expectations started to be tweaked.

As it prepared to be screened at last year’s Toronto Film Festival, Evans, himself, was less than confident The Raid would catch fire with critics. He was proud of what they’d made but pragmatic about the competition and nature of film distribution. He needn’t have worried. It quickly became the darling of the festival, with industry papers applauding the raw, confrontational style and the relentless momentum as a breath of fresh air.

“We were looking at the film in post-production, about a week before we went to Toronto and in that last screening we were actually quite pessimistic. We were so ‘into’ the film by that time that ALL we could see were the flaws. We weren’t hating it, but we weren’t sure about it at all. We were hopeful we’d get a decent review… maybe something we could pull something from to put a quote on the poster…No, we could never have anticipated the word of mouth on this and the way it’s gone. Even if we had I think that would have made us the most arrogant people on the planet!” he laughs. “ It has taken us all completely by surprise”

Was it perhaps a case of simply being the right project in the right place at the right time? Evans suggests that whatever technology comes along, audiences will sometimes find themselves yearning for some of the timeless basics of good action and drama.

“My approach to film-making is a little bit old-fashioned in a way. I’m not sure if that’s helped in the sense that audiences may be tired of the ‘new’ style. I wanted to go back a step. I wear my influences on my sleeve. It’s informed heavily by Hong Kong cinema from the 1980 and 1990s, by Sam Peckinpah’s work on The Wild Bunch. It’s just a case of not editing in too flashy a way. I only ever use straight cuts. We aren’t doing those flashy movements with the camera or special effects…” he explains.

“I miss the golden age of Peckinpah and John Woo and Jackie Chan. There’s were action films with… clarity. You could see what was going on, read the action scenes and time was taken to build a sense of rhythm with the shots in fight scenes. The decision on how many bullets were being fired was one made of rhythm and made of a necessity for violence. What feels right? It wasn’t sewn together haphazardly , it was predetermined and planned out,” he continues. “That’s one of the things we brought to The Raid that I think people have most responded to. I don’t think we’re being ground-breaking… I’ve just done the things I learned by watching better film-makers over the years.”

Maybe so, but Evans didn’t make it easy for himself. The very nature of filming the story of a tower-block siege made the environment itself a tricky one to master. This would not be the wide-open environment favoured by gesticulating, graceful martial-artists… this would be close-up, brutal and claustrophobic. The team needed to find the best way to get the audience feeling as if they were trapped in there too, while dealing with the pragmatic side of the basic technology needed to shoot the film.

“Shooting the stuff in the corridor was pretty hard because it was only two metres wide. Our remit was that we were to see everything in the corridor, we don’t hide stuff. Even if we wanted to come around from behind into a profile shot, we still had to see it all. That created some logistical problems we had to fix,” Gareth remembers. “We had to find solutions… such as moving the fighters near a doorway, so that the art department could open/close the door behind the camera as it went by. We could step into the room and get a little more focal distance between the camera and the subject…”

The shoot was a tough one, the conditions already adding to what would be a concise shoot for a n action production.

“From beginning to end the whole film took about two and a half to three months. It was hard. When people make a drama film and get that amount, it sounds like a long time, but when it comes to a martial arts film or action-based film, that’s actually VERY tight. You spend days working on a fight sequence to get a minute’s worth of footage. It’s hard – really difficult. A shot may last three or four seconds’ worth of screen-time, but if you are doing fifteen to twenty takes of it, that’s an hour of shooting…” he notes.

continued next post

GeneChing
05-09-2012, 03:52 PM
Success breeds imitation (or in Hollywood, ‘re-imagining’) and the fans who had first witnessed The Raid’s potential were somewhat cynical when it was announced a western remake – to be helmed by Brad Inglesby - was already on the cards before the original’s international roll-out. Evans himself is more pragmatic and says he’s being consulted but wants them to do their own thing.

“For the remake, I’m an Executive Producer on it – I’ll have a certain say on somethings but I feel that’s more independent and for it to work, I have to step away. I can’t be over the shoulder of whoever gets to direct. It’s important for them to approach it with a fresh pair of eyes, coming to it with a freedom to take it in whatever direction he wants to take it.”

However Gareth is adamant that the Hollywood remake will not affect his plans to film a sequel to the original. For that he WILL be completely hands-on and controlling every aspect of its production. “ For the sequel… that’s MINE to do with whatever I want. I’m very much involved with that, writing the script, editing it, shooting it… The Hollywood interest in the sequel is purely on the distribution level. In terms of everything, I retain full control in the content of the sequel,” he explains. “ My intention is to just make a kick-ass film and fingers-crossed people will take to it the same way as they did the first. I guess there IS a level of pressure now, I know, as people will have high expectations after the first one. It would be foolish for us to EXPECT them to react the same way to the sequel. There will be people who will prefer the first one, people who will prefer the second one. It’d down to us that when we make that second one, that we approach it in the right way, with the same sensibilities… if we try to keep an eye on the market or try to make it for anybody else, we’re the wrong people to do it. It wouldn’t be what WE want it to be. We’ll just hope people continue to follow us…”

Pre-production on the sequel will hopefully start later in the year. He’ll be a guest at this month’s Kapow event in London but otherwise hopes to enjoy some rare time-off before throwing himself back into his work. In the meantime, he hopes to catch up on some of his own cinema-viewing and welcomes the people who are helping shape the current and next generation…

“I’m a big fan of cinema. David Fincher is one of my all-time favourite directors. In terms of martial-arts, when you look at the films from Thailand – the work by Panna Rittikrai and Prachya Pinkaew… they broke the mould with Ong-Bak. That really kick-started the action genre again. That made people sit up and take notice. They’ve blazed a trail. Also Wilson Yip with Ip Man… there’s people who deserve more recognition than what they get. We consume a lot. When we make films we see what other people are up to. For instance, the stunt-people like Eric Jacobus are producing some incredible independent content of their own…”

Will Mr Evans ever go to Hollywood? He says that while he’s loves filming in Indonesia and the region, he has nothing against filming elsewhere as long as the project sparks an interest.

“I’m game. I want to do some stuff in the US and UK at some point in my career, but whatever it is, I don’t consider myself tied down to one country or one type of film, y’know?” he admits. “All I care about is that it’s the right film for me and that it’s the right script. As long as I believe in every scene and line of dialogue, then I’ll do it. If I don’t, I can’t be the one to do it. We’ll see how it goes…”

The Raid: Redemption (18) is released by Momentum Pictures and opens on 18th May across the UK. Nice nod to Eric Jacobus (http://sphotos.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/311814_10150428451284363_135964689362_10354241_687 051294_n.jpg).

MightyB
02-26-2014, 12:04 PM
I can't believe I didn't watch this before. Saw a preview for the Raid 2 and thought I should watch the 1st. Glad I did.

@PLUGO
01-26-2016, 01:08 PM
Could it be that Evans is working on a remake of his student film Samurai Monogatari?

Or is this footage from the original 2003 project?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdrwseAC9Jw

GeneChing
06-23-2016, 09:08 AM
THE RAID Movies Coming To Comic Books (http://www.newsarama.com/29844-the-raid-movies-coming-to-comic-books.html)
by Newsarama Staff Date: 22 June 2016 Time: 06:17 PM ET

http://i.newsarama.com/images/i/000/173/016/i02/The_Raid.jpg?1466633926
CREDIT: Titan Comics

Press Release

Titan Comics are thrilled to announce that The Raid is punching its way into comic books, in late 2016. Titan is working closely with the director Gareth Evans (The Raid, The Raid 2) and XYZ Films to develop all-new stories featuring characters from the series.

Premiering in 2011, Indonesian martial-arts movie The Raid (also known as The Raid: Redemption) sent pulses racing at the Toronto International Film Festival and secured unanimous critical praise, rocketing to cult film status across the world.

The movie captured audiences with its boundary-pushing, inventive choreography and piston-pumping narrative where a lone, isolated SWAT team are trapped by a ruthless mobster and his army of killers and thugs inside a tenement block, and they have to fight through to the top.

Directed by Gareth Evans and produced by PT. Merantau Films and XYZ Films, the high-octane franchise has garnered great success since its release. The first film had 10 nominations at the 2012 Maya Awards. It was followed, in 2014, by The Raid 2, which featured the character of Rama returning to battle against corruption in his own police force.

“At Titan we’re thrilled to be publishing The Raid comic books,” said editor Martin Eden. “Gareth is a visionary and a huge talent. It’s a pleasure to work with him on developing his characters for the comic book page. We promise to deliver the same thrilling, fifth-gear adrenaline that fans have come to expect from the franchise.”



I don't know that a comic version would be that effective compared to the action of the film.

GeneChing
07-16-2019, 08:44 AM
SPOILER - I had the privilege of interviewing Iko recently for an article coming up in our FALL 2019 issue (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?71322-Fall-2019). Subscribe by August 1 2019 and get a FREE DVD.
(https://www.martialartsmart.com/19341.html)

Iko Uwais Is Hollywood’s Next Big Martial Arts Star. Just Ask Keanu Reeves and Mark Wahlberg. (https://www.menshealth.com/entertainment/amp28325845/iko-uwais-stuber-villain/?__twitter_impression=true)
Hollywood has an action aversion: turning well-choreographed fight scenes into quick-cutting, hand-held cacophonies. Iko Uwais hopes his films will change that.
BY JOSH ST. CLAIR JUL 12, 2019

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RENDHA RAIS

When J.J. Abrams resurrected Star Wars, he wanted excitement—and actors who would make the new films fun. For a particular scene in The Force Awakens, when raider assassins board and attempt to hijack the Millennium Falcon from their galactic target, Han Solo, Abrams wanted action—and actors who could make it feel real. Abrams called on Iko Uwais.

It was a fan’s desire as much as it was a director’s request. Abrams, like many in Hollywood, discovered Uwais through his work on The Raid: Redemption, Welsh director Gareth Evans’ Indonesian martial arts film equally inspired by Die Hard, an M.I.A. music video, and the Malay self-defense art form Silat. The Raid became one of the most celebrated action movies of the century and featured hand-to-hand combat to render Jason Bourne a haymaker-throwing street brawler and John Wick a novice MMA fighter. (John Wick star Keanu Reeves was so enthralled by Uwais, he cast him in a small role for his directorial debut, Man of Tai Chi.)

Abrams wanted that action. So he called and cast Uwais and Raid co-star Cecep Arif Rahman to hunt down Han. He also asked Uwais to choreograph a lightsaber fight for later in the film. Uwais, a champion in Pencak Silat, had by then written and performed hundreds of murderous fight choreographies involving knives and machetes. The concept he showed Abrams called for a duel and featured a finishing move where a fighter strategically retracts his lightsaber before gaining his opponent’s rear-side, and then, as Uwais explains, “with a swift move, puts the dead lightsaber into the back of his opponent, and turns it on.”

Abrams loved the choreography, but thought the fight too violent for the movie’s PG-13 rating. Ultimately, it was cut from the film. In their own roles, Uwais and Rahman hold less than five minutes of total screen time: they engage in a brief exchange with Solo; they are set upon by a tentacled monster; they run, turn, shoot, and die—mostly off screen. By the time the “action” clears, theatergoers probably had no idea that two of the world’s premier martial artists, brought on to help rejuvenate the most iconic film franchise of all time, did little more than stand around; their role was essentially a cameo.

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RENDHA RAIS

Of course, Uwais doesn’t see it that way, and he was happy and honored that Abrams gave him the call, cameo or no. “Getting calls from Hollywood has been quite surreal to be honest,” says Uwais. “Making a living out of my real passion, which is Silat; that’s certainly a privilege for me.”

Uwais’ humility can be disarming; for a flashy, elbow-and-knee-throwing performer, his offstage presence is surprisingly placid. He stands at roughly 5’7,” muscled but not dominating, and he smiles shyly and with the sort of spotlight aversion native only to those who truly never dreamt of a spotlight.

Mark Wahlberg on Uwais: “badass.”

Though already an action superstar in the eastern hemisphere, Uwais and his non-cameo talents are only now coming to American screens. Last year, Uwais shot and fought beside Mark Wahlberg as a triple-crossing police informer in Mile 22, his first major American movie role. Even surrounded by a cast that included Wahlberg, Ronda Rousey, and John Malkovich, Uwais became the most electrifying part of the production, and he outpaced action star Wahlberg in every action-starred sequence. During an interview for the film, Wahlberg simply called Uwais a “badass.”

It’s a moniker more of Hollywood’s elite have come to recognize.

Uwais will appear onscreen this weekend as the bleach blond super-villain fist fighting Dave Bautista and Kumal Nanjiani in Stuber. In August, he will take lead in his own Netflix-produced martial arts series Wu Assassins.

Despite all the modesty, his surprise that the likes of Abrams, Reeves, and Wahlberg even know who he is, Uwais may soon be the most sought-after martial arts star in the world.

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RENDHA RAIS

The legend of Silat tells of a woman, Rama Sukana, who witnesses two animals battling in the wild. Rama then incorporates these movements into a unique fighting style: Silat. In some regions, the fighting animals include a monkey and a tiger. Others tell the story of tiger and a hawk. (Uwais’ character in The Raid films is also named “Rama.”) In the human world, Silat employs strikes using every part of the body, grappling, and throws; traditional weapons include knives and daggers.

Uwais began practicing Pencak Silat, a variation native to Indonesia, when he was ten. He learned under his grandfather, H. Achmad Bunawar, a master of the form and founder of a Silat school in Jakarta, where Iko was born. Central Jakarta was a dangerous place for a teenager in the 1990s, as Indonesia transitioned from economic hardship and largely authoritarian rule. For Uwais, Silat wasn’t just a family tradition; it also proved to be a necessary survival skill.

One day at school, an older classmate, thinking he had a beef with Uwais, jumped him—with five other friends. Uwais reflexively began blocking punches, ignoring the five cronies while focussing on the one classmate. It felt like spontaneous movement—fending off the six older kids. He sustained a few bruises, but escaped unharmed. When Uwais told his grandfather, he just smiled, gave Uwais advice to stay out of fights, and then trained him even harder. Uwais was 17.

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Uwais says he always avoided fights when in school. “That is absolutely not Silat is about,” he says. “It’s a self defense, and a spiritual based martial art. It focuses on respect for others, to make your mind and body healthy. Martial art skills without values and responsibility can be dangerous.”
RENDHA RAIS

In 2007, director Gareth Evans moved to Indonesia and began work on a documentary showcasing Silat. He sought out Bunawar. By then, Uwais, 24, was driving a truck for a telecommunications company. He had briefly lived out his dream of playing professional soccer for a local club and two years earlier captured the National Pencak Silat Championship.

While filming Bunawar, Evans and his wife, Rangga Maya Barack, noticed Uwais in a practice session. They sensed a screen presence in his performance and offered him a leading role in their upcoming project, Merantau, a feature film promoting Silat. The film became a cult hit, a martial arts movie stripped of flashy acrobatics in favor of fast, real, brutal choreography. It made Uwais a local star.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAUj0cpxt-I

Soon after, Uwais and Evans set out to film what would become their breakout project, The Raid: Redemption, a one location action film: one high rise building, one raiding group of SWAT officers, including Uwias, and floor after floor of bad guys. (Evans made The Raid with just $1.1 million.) Evans and Uwais then shot the sequel, The Raid 2: Berandal, which premiered at Sundance, featured even larger fight scenes and one car chase, murdered 327 people on screen, causing one audience member to faint and Malaysia to initially ban the film, and solidified Evans’ and Uwais’ status in the world of martial arts cinema: they were on top.

That's when Hollywood started calling.

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Uwais and director Gareth Evans
LARRY BUSACCA GETTY IMAGES

In August 2018, as Mile 22 and his first major American performance hit theaters, Uwais was already filming his next project, Stuber. He had also returned east to shoot The Night Comes for Us (Indonesia) and Triple Threat (China)—both low-earning, but critically-well-received martial arts films. Uwais was as busy as ever.

By the end of August, however, Mile 22 had been thoroughly thrashed by critics and at the U.S. box office, stomping the breaks on what was supposed to be a film franchise. That failure also meant that Uwais' most successful U.S. role to date remains his Star Wars cameo. All 3 minutes of it.

But success for Uwais can't be measured by numbers, and it's almost frustrating how content Uwais appears despite his lukewarm American reception. "I'm just grateful that I have a chance to introduce traditional Indonesian martial arts to a worldwide audience," he says, underscoring his role as a choreographer and cultural ambassador; he sees his role as creating shock and awareness.

But why, even while Abrams, Reeves, and Wahlberg see Uwais as the next big thing, is Uwais not yet the next big thing?
continued next post

GeneChing
07-16-2019, 08:46 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8lgZBmyxwI

Part of Uwais' lackluster American reception is baked into the history of Hollywood martial arts.

Jackie Chan, Uwais' own inspiration, was 26 when he appeared in his first American film, The Big Brawl, a movie which saw marginal success in the American box office, but was poorly reviewed by critics. Chan’s breakout in the States came only later and with Rush Hour (1998), when Chan was 34.

Uwais, now 36, faces the same challenges as Chan—as well as Chan's fellow Hong Kong film star Donnie Yen—namely American directors who aren’t quite sure how to employ his talent for cinematic success. (Yen was also cast in the new Star Wars franchise and, despite his martial arts talents, was also given little to do.)

Most Hollywood directors lack the eye (and ear) for action. When Uwais explains the aesthetic of Silat, he does so using percussive language: “Silat is not just block and punch; it has a specific rhythm to it, a dynamic to it.” Each fight scene, each block and punch, must edit to a beat. (Raid director Gareth Evans would even match this beat to onscreen gunshots.)

One of the reasons why Chan, Yen, and Uwais had (and have) such a difficult time adapting to Western cinema is the tone-deafness among Hollywood directors; they fail to edit around these actors' particular fight and comedy rhythms.

continued next post

GeneChing
07-16-2019, 08:47 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKetBgfbLBU

The result, notes Uwais, is that American films begin “over editing” and obscuring fight movements. They turn symphony into cacophony. Directors, Uwais explains, must compensate for actors who lack fighting skills; they use aggressive camera work to make movements look aggressive. Hence all the hand-held, shaky cam and quick-cutting fight sequences you see. (Yen's Star Wars fight lasts less than 30 seconds and cuts 19 times. Uwais' premier hospital fight scene in Mile 22 cuts 19 times in the first 13 seconds.)

Quick-cutting mainly allows directors to inexpensively simulate aggression without showing aggression, the cause and effect of fight movements that take months to prepare and shoot—and potentially slap the film with a "restricted" rating.

And until recently, well-choreographed, R-rated cinema didn’t win at the box office. The success of Chad Stahelski’s John Wick franchise, which goes to great choreography lengths in the name of realism, may help to upend that economical thinking. But until Hollywood is able to lean behind a fighter like Uwais or Yen for a leading role, their action skills are likely to remain hidden, over edited, or simply under appreciated. (And while this slight may not visibly aggravate Uwais, it should aggravate movie fans; why wouldn't you want well-choreographed action movie?)

https://hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/images/mv5bmtqxmdg5nzk2n15bml5banbnxkftztcwndmznduznwatat-v1-sy1000-cr0-0-1489-1000-al-1562615271.jpg
Uwais in The Raid: Redemption
IMDB

But perhaps Uwais' films are not the ones western critics or viewers are ready to see.

In his one-star review of The Raid, critic Roger Ebert wrote that the film had “no dialogue, no plot, no characters, no humanity. Have you noticed how cats and dogs will look at a TV screen on which there are things jumping around? It is to that level of the brain's reptilian complex that the film appeals.”

When asked whether he thinks his films are excessively violent, Uwais simply highlights martial arts’ balletic qualities. “I always try my best to bring the beauty of the martial arts into the screen,” he says. The fight is an aesthetic, after all. An art form. A beat. Yet it's one American cinema continues to *******ize. Or let stand in the background, while the amateur A-listers slug it out. Or cross lightsabers. No humanity indeed.

JOSH ST. CLAIR


THREADS
Stuber (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?70756-Stuber)
Star Wars: The Force Awakens (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?64710-Star-Wars-The-Force-Awakens)
Mile 22 (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?68475-Mile-22)
The Raid (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?61840-The-Raid-starring-Iko-Uwais)

Jimbo
07-16-2019, 01:01 PM
I hope I'm wrong, but all indications are that Iko Uwais's career peaked several years ago with The Raid 2: Berandal. Gareth Evans was his best directorial match. Evans was an anomaly: a Westerner who actually knew how to make Asian films. I don't see Hollywood adapting enough to make Iko Uwais as big a star as he should be. I foresee him appearing in small roles here and there in some big-budget Hollywood action films, and starring or co-starring in mediocre straight-to-DVD independent action/MA movies.

I think it's unfortunate that Iko and Evans went their separate ways. Iko is awesome, but Evans was the one who got the ball rolling at full speed. It's going to be difficult if not impossible to match Iko's success and impressiveness in the first two 'The Raid' films.

It also underscores just how impressive stars like Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung really are. They started out really young. Long before they appeared in American screens, they were already screen veterans with considerable resumes, as child actors, stuntmen, choreographers, co-stars, and finally, lead stars and directors. Their best work was behind them before they became household names in the US (Sammo starred in CBS's Martial Law). The last MA star to even approach that (and still not to the same level) is Donnie Yen. IMO, the days of becoming a big star in Hollywood based on being a martial artist are long gone. American audiences would rather see Tom Cruise, Keanu Reeves, Charleze Theron, Chadwick Boseman, etc., made to look like MAists with the aid of physical trainers, CGI and quick editing (or see a pumped-up "sex symbol" with a super over-the-top persona like Dwayne Johnson) than some obscure Asian actors.

Even an actor/MAist like Scott Adkins is almost in the same boat. He has a standard Hollywood "look," but it's highly doubtful he'll become as big a name as Van Damme or Seagal became in the '80s/early '90s. And Adkins is already 40-something now.