Makes me think of Showdown In Little Tokyo.
Jox, do you know something about the budget for the movie?
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Dida wrote:
Jox, do you know something about the budget for the movie?
Jox wrote:Here's a revised plot posted on IMDB:A tough NY cop, Nick (Dolph Lundgren), runs afoul of the Russian mob engaged in human trafficking, and they end up killing his wife and daughter for revenge. Determined to make them pay, he follows the kingpin to Bangkok, the hub of their activities. He teams up w/ a Thai detective, Tony Jaa, and they decide to wipe out the entire organization and terminate their business entirely.
Tom wrote:$100 million.
What?
I can dream can't I?
First time meeting #EkachaiUekrongtham #beautifulboxer 2004 He's directing me in the action thriller Skin Trade #Skintrade early next year. I'm on the left in the red T-shirt
Jox wrote:Plus in Thailand you don't need much either, even Refn's ONLY GOD FORGIVES was made for less than $5 million apparently.
Dolph Lundgren Taps BEAUTIFUL BOXER Director For SKIN TRADE
Upcoming Dolph Lundgren / Tony Jaa star vehicle Skin Trade has its director and according to a post on Lundgren's Instagram account the job is going to Beautiful Boxer helmer Ekachai Uekrongtham.
It's an interesting choice for while Uekrongtham has showcased action chops and an interest in broader genre film in his past work he's still primarily viewed as an arthouse director and it's a safe bet that he'll push both Lundgren and co-star Tony Jaa harder on the performance side of the equation than normal, which could be a very good thing.
Skin Trade is an international action picture set against the backdrop of the sex trade in Bangkok. Lundgren wrote the initial draft - since worked on further by Universal Soldier veteran John Hyams - with Lundgren producing and starring as an ex cop. Jaa will co-star as Lundgren's Bangkok based counterpart. Beautiful Boxer premiered at the 2004 Berlin film festival before going on a lengthy run that included stops at top tier events in Hong Kong and Locarno.
Nathan wrote:Jox wrote:Plus in Thailand you don't need much either, even Refn's ONLY GOD FORGIVES was made for less than $5 million apparently.
And the film looks like one of the freshest and most beautifully filmed in years. Brad Krevoy and all those hack producers Dolph, JC and Seagal get landed with should be nothing but embarrassed, aside from perhaps in awe that someone has managed to take $5 million, shoot in a stunning country and make a film that doesn't look like a turd that's been thrown into a DVD case and wrapped in cellophane. And if they need any more proof, it's got a big name in it and won't be going straight to DVD. Meanwhile they spent $200 million on World War Z and it looks like something Seagal has done after a bad curry marathon. Just saying.
I am confident this one will be above Dolph's recent fare because he's actually on-board for this one. Sure he was there for films like Blood of Redemption but I'm sure mentally his mind was somewhere else. I'm glad he has stepped back from directing too because this way he still gets to call the shots but also focus on his acting performance which should be very dramatic here and hopefully very violent - for a while I have wanted to see Dolph play a role like Liam Neeson in Taken. US4 is violent but Dolph's character is not a vengeful father, he is a killer cyborg.
I expect to see some elegant shootouts in this, probably quite bloody. Maybe a little bit like The Man from Nowhere and I pray that we finally get to see Dolph show some martial arts skills in decent length fights. I know this is not a fighting film but you can't go to Thailand and have an extended shooting schedule and Tony Jaa under your black belt without pulling some moves. I will be grossly disappointed if there is not some classic MA in this along with The Departed style shootouts. I may be jumping the gun here, but if there is one film that Dolph is in lead, that has the best chance of a limited theatrical, it is this one. His most promising project in ages.
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