Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 11
The Furious Wins 4-Star Praise, Poised to Reshape Action Cinema
Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 11

The Furious Wins 4-Star Praise, Poised to Reshape Action Cinema

3 articles · Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 11

Summary

  • Opening Friday in wide release, “The Furious” is hailed as a potential genre-shifter because its fight scenes turn familiar brawls into dense, multi-directional swarms of bodies.
  • Kensuke Sonomura’s choreography drives that verdict: hallway and circle-fight setups become layered attacks from above and below, while Kenji Tanigaki’s staging keeps the action grounded rather than wire-fu weightless.
  • Xie Miao plays a mute father chasing kidnappers after his 9-year-old daughter Rainy is abducted, but the review calls the rescue plot routine and the script one of the film’s weakest elements.
  • Joe Taslim, JeeJa Yanin, Yayan Ruhian and Brian Le bolster the cast, with Yanin and Le singled out for standout combat moments in a multinational, Southeast Asia-set crime story.
  • At 1 hour, 53 minutes and rated R for strong bloody violence and language, the Lionsgate release is framed as a defining stunt film that could influence Hollywood action within a few years.

Insights

Does the film's conventional plot undermine its supposedly revolutionary action sequences?
Is 'volumetric' combat the next 'gun-fu' that will completely reshape Hollywood action?