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Tekken (2009 film)

Tekken (鉄拳) is a 2009 American science fiction martial arts film directed by Dwight Little and distributed by Warner Bros. and Anchor Bay Entertainment. It was written by Alan B. McElroy and is loosely based on the fighting game series of the same name. Its story follows Jin Kazama in his attempts to enter the Iron Fist Tournament in order to avenge the loss of his mother, Jun Kazama, by confronting the forces of the city that are also holding the competition. It stars Jon Foo, Kelly Overton, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Ian Anthony Dale, Cung Le, Darrin Dewitt Henson, Luke Goss, Marian Zapico, Lateef Crowder, Candîce Hillebrand, Anton Kasabov, and Roger Huerta.

Tekken
Japanese film poster
Directed byDwight Little
Screenplay byAlan B. McElroy
Based onTekken
by Namco
Produced bySteven Paul
Benedict Carver
StarringJon Foo
Kelly Overton
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
Ian Anthony Dale
Cung Le
Darrin Dewitt Henson
Luke Goss
Marian Zapico
Lateef Crowder
Candice Hillebrand
Anton Kasabov
Roger Huerta
Narrated byJon Foo
Kelly Overton
CinematographyBrian J. Reynolds
Edited byDavid Checel
Music byJohn Hunter
Production
company
Distributed byAnchor Bay Entertainment
Release dates
  • November 5, 2009 (2009-11-05) (AFI Film Festival)
  • March 20, 2010 (2010-03-20) (Japan)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$30 million[1]
Box office$1.7 million[2]

The film was originally announced by the Tekken publisher of games, Namco Bandai in 2002 but did not start development until 2007 due to two directors wanting to handle the movie. Experienced in sports movies, Little decided to make Tekken focused on realism resulting in the removal of supernatural elements from the franchise as well as comic relief characters. This also led to the inclusion of martial artists as the main cast to produce well-choreographed battles. The movie was produced by Crystal Sky Pictures and premiered on November 5, 2009, at the AFI Film Festival and was released in Japan on March 20, 2010.

It grossed $1.7 million worldwide.[3] The film was generally praised for its fighting scenes but criticized for its unfaithful narrative and poor acting within the main cast. The criticism also came from the games' director Katsuhiro Harada too and the desire to produce a more accessible movie with Tekken: Blood Vengeance two years later. Nevertheless, Tekken spawned the 2014 prequel Tekken 2: Kazuya's Revenge.

Plot

In the late 2010s, 8 megacorporations divide up the world around them; the biggest being Tekken Corporation, which controls North America. In order to placate the masses, the corporation's Chairman, Heihachi Mishima, sponsors the King of Iron Fist Tournament, or Iron Fist - in which fighters from the 8 corporations battle until one is left standing and receives a lifetime of stardom and wealth. In a slum area surrounding Tekken City called the Anvil, lives the rebellious young man Jin Kazama, who makes money as a contraband runner for resistance groups that fight against the Tekken Corporation. Jin has been raised and trained by his mother, Jun, who never speaks of Jin's father, claiming he is dead. One night, Jin is targeted by the Jackhammers, the elite specs group that patrols the Anvil and ensures the safety of Tekken City. Jun is killed by the Jackhammers instead and Jin swears revenge against Heihachi. In the ruins of his former home, he finds a Tekken Fighter I.D. belonging to Jun, revealing she was once an Iron Fist fighter. After defeating the disgraced Marshall Law, Jin goes to Tekken City, sponsored by former boxer Steve Fox.

Upon entering Tekken City, Jin befriends mixed martial artist Christie Monteiro. He wins the match against Miguel Caballero Rojo, nearly killing him in a fit of rage. Heihachi's son, Kazuya Mishima, is impressed and offers Jin a place in Tekken Corporation, but Jin refuses. Later that night, Jin is attacked by Nina Williams, at Kazuya's request. Jin survives the assassination attempt, thanks to Christie's interference. Jin vows to win Iron Fist and to kill both Heihachi and Kazuya. When he gives Fox Jun's ID, he realizes he is her son, telling him that he knew her. During the quarter-finals, Christie defeats Nina.

Kazuya then has Heihachi imprisoned, effectively seizing control of Tekken. Jin narrowly defeats the elite swordsman Yoshimitsu. Kazuya says rules have changed, and so they must now fight to the death. Jin, Christie, and Steve try to escape, along with Raven, leaving Nina and Anna Williams, and Sergei Dragunov behind. Kazuya brings down some guards, causing a firefight. Steve, Christie, and Raven cover Jin but he walks across Heihachi's cell. Angry, Jin tries to taunt Heihachi, saying he is responsible for killing Jin's mother. However, since Heihachi is their only mean of escaping Tekken, Steve frees Heihachi and joins the group. In the gunfight, Raven is wounded and recaptured.

In the warehouse that Jin uses as protection, Heihachi reveals to Jin that Kazuya raped his mother, making him Jin's father, and left her for dead. Heihachi took her out of Tekken City to the Anvil to keep her alive. Heihachi states the corporation's true purpose is to restore order to the world. Later on, the group is located by Jackhammers, who kill Steve Fox in a firefight and recapture the rest of the escapees. Before taking them back to Iron Fist, Kazuya orders the Jackhammers to execute Heihachi. Back in Tekken City, Kazuya changes the rules of the tournament and now wants the fighters to fight to the death. In the Finals, Jin is forced to fight against Bryan Fury, who had already killed Sergei Dragunov in a death match, while Kazuya holds Christie in the control room. At first, he is outmatched, but remembering his mother's teachings, Jin defeats Bryan. Angered about Jin's victory, Kazuya enters the tournament himself armed with two moon axes. The weaponless Jin is saved by Christie, and pins Kazuya, who baits Jin by claiming that he remembers how Jun "put up quite a fight". Jin defeats Kazuya but refuses to kill his father.

Jin walks out of Tekken City's gate and is saluted by the Jackhammers, symbolizing his new role as CEO of Tekken Corporation. After the credits, Kazuya realizes that he lost control of the Jackhammers who spared Heihachi following his command.

Cast

The cast of the movie includes:[4]

Production

 
In order to portray a sense of realism, Cyril Raffaelli (left) was cast as the main fight choreography.

Talks about making Tekken into a movie have been underway since June 2002 with Namco Bandai stating production would start in 2003.[5] The film was meant to be released in 2005.[6] It was reported that the production company, Crystal Sky Pictures, had acquired the film rights for $60 million. After several years of hiatus, the project resurfaced after a teaser poster appeared on the web in October 2008.[7] This was mostly due to the global success of Lara Croft: Tomb Raider as well as the long-lasting popularity of the Tekken franchise.[8] Originally, Charles Stone III was going to be film's director who teased in 2004 it would different from other adaptations like Mortal Kombat or Tomb Raider; He claimed the narrative would heavily focus on the characters to provoke a more dramatic style. He aimed to get famous actors like Jackie Chan and Jet Li believing the budget would be enough to get such skilled actors. The production of the movie was set to start during 2005. However, the project saw a major change in staff members.[9] Stone was investigating K-1 in during the making of the movie while taking notes from Enter the Dragon (1973) with the objective of the making the final product both accessible and realistic.[10] In 2007, Dwight H. Little signed to become the film's new director.[11]

The film originated from the next director's experience with martial arts-based films including Marked for Death (1990) and Rapid Fire (1992); Dwight H. Little was called by the producer to direct another martial art movie, Tekken, which he had only knowledge due to his two children being gamers of the fighting game franchise. Little requested help from writer Alan B. McElroy, who had done Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers and Rapid Fire while doing research for the movie. The director and writer agreed to remove the supernatural elements from the film, most notably Jin Kazama's devil mutation as well as the campy elements from the franchise, the animal fighter, once the film was being created. They wanted to focus more on the sports-like story like Rocky which is associated with family bonds as well as multiple cultures. The characters used in the narrative were chosen since they came across as the most realistic ones in contrast to the supernatural Devil Jin which they felt was more fitting for a more anime film.[12] Luke Goss said that the team intended to make the film R rated.[13]

The main stuntman was Cyril Raffaelli who revealed the movie has a total of 9 fights with each containing nearly 50 moves.[14] The film finished shooting in May 2009.[13] In order to bring more realism to the fights, the team used real fighters including Lateef Crowder, Roger Huerta and Cung Le. In order to have more supporting fighters, the team also got Gary Daniels which gave them the need of the main character requiring to be played as a real fighter too rather than use two actors for the stunts. Finding Jon Foo as Jin proved to be a difficult task due to how they needed somebody who was young, skilled, and handsome. They met the actor in Thailand. Among other actors include Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa whom they found fitting for Heihachi Mishima as well as the skilled Ian Anthony Dale.[12]

 
The film was shot in Shreveport, Louisiana

Little attempted to cast Danielle Harris based on her experience with Marked For Death but she did not appear. Nevertheless, he was surprised by Gary Daniels's performance as Brian Fury. Though the narrative appears to explore political events due to how the Tekken tournament has changed the world, there were no intentions to provide such context. Instead, the main conflict of the story involves Jin Kazama's relationship with his family, most notably the villain, Kazuya Mishima. While the film does not offer a proper closure to the family struggle, Little claimed they added scenes about him and Heihachi to provide content for a sequel, should it be approved. Though Jin has two love interests in the movie, Little claims the first one Jin has never become serious, citing the character's young age as the cause.[15] Little describes the film's story as that of a rebel who wishes to give freedom to his people following their restricted lives in their hometown.[16]

Jon Foo felt honored to play Jin's character in the live-action film based on the series. He says he is a fan of the Tekken games. Still, he found it difficult to play Jin as he spent three months on a diet in order to do the fighting moves for the live-action film.[17] In recording for the movie, Thailand to do a screen test. He also flew to America to do another screen test. Foo was glad he was chosen for the role of Jin because it was the first he played the lead in his career. Among several scenes, Foo favorited Jin's and Brain's battle.[18]

In shooting the film, the team originally wanted to use Europe but ended up in North America in the need of arenas. They ended in Shreveport, Louisiana, because they had built a new public arena down the road. While the team used CGI visuals for the arenas, there was a mix of real buildings as well as crowds that viewed the battles, which was especially helpful since they did not have a big budget. In regards to battles, the staff aimed to make homages to the video games with Little specifying the faithful recreation of Eddy Gordo's moves. They compared the fighting styles they used with Gladiator (2000) when dealing with the Yoshimitsu and [12]

Release

The film was screened at the Mann's Criterion Theatre in Santa Monica on November 5, 2009, as part of the AFM Film Festival to find a solid distributor.[19] It was released in Japan on March 20, 2010 through Warner Bros. Pictures (Japan).[20] The film also premiered on July 27, 2010 in Singapore and August 4 in the Philippines (via Pioneer Films).[21] One week before the Philippine premiere, Jon Foo visited Manila to promote the film.[21][22] Due to its poor reception, the film never saw a wide theatrical release in the United States, and was released direct-to-video instead. They had a theatrical distributor, and we had a deal for theatrical, and, just because of the new economic times and the way business is done with DVD, that company went out of business. Then we were left as orphans and Anchor Bay made the release which the director found helpful.[12]

The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc in Japan on August 11, 2010. In the United Kingdom, Optimum Released and distributed the film on May 2, 2011.[23] Anchor Bay Entertainment released the film in the United States on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on July 19, 2011.[24]

Reception

Tekken holds a critical score of 0%, based on 6 reviews, and has a 31% approval rating by audiences on Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 2.68/10.[25]

Brian Orndorf of DVD Talk gave the film two stars out of five, writing: "Tekken is a failure on many levels, but it does make a plucky attempt to replicate the flippy-floppy nature of the fighting elements, creating a limb-snapping effort of escapism surrounded by bland writing and sleepy performances". He opined that director Dwight H. Little "show[s] off an impressive spectrum of fighting styles and intensity, though he goes a little crazy with trendy cinematographic choices and hyperactive editing".[26] Rating it "Guilty", DVD Verdict enjoyed how faithful are most of the character's designs to the games alongside the mutuals but with criticism aimed towards battles which employ weaponry. However, he felt that the protagonist's quest to seek revenge lacks focus.[27] Martial Arts Action Movies claimed while the film seems universally hated due to how unfaithful is to the source material and "bland" storyline, he still liked thanks to the visuals and fight choreography.[28] Roobia said that most of the budget went to the visuals as he felt that the cast had poor performance acting but still found it accessible to all audiences.[29]

Critics enjoyed Jon Foo's appearance and movies but criticized some traits of Jin's portrayal. BeyondHollywood thought Jon Foo's appearance might appeal to viewers based on his similarities with Jin.[30] Rating it B, The Fandom Post disliked the love interests presented to Jin as well as his fights in the Iron Fist Tournament where Jin ends up joining the finals without focus on the previous ones. Nevertheless, the writer felt the film was enjoyable.[31] DVD Verdict criticized how Jin was lacking most of his important traits, most notably his Devil Gene.[27] Although Martial Arts and Action Movies criticized Foo's acting to the point of making Jin emotionless, his fight sequences were praised.[28] Roobla also praised the fight sequences, most notably Jin's fight against Eddie Gordo.[29]

Paul Pritchard of DVD Verdict compared Tekken to other video game film adaptations: "In the grand scheme of things, Tekken bests both Street Fighter: The Ultimate Battle (1994) and Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li (2009) movies with ease, but lacks the goofy charms of Mortal Kombat. Had it embraced its roots more openly, the film may well have offered more excitement. As it is, Tekken is just an average action flick, with nothing to distinguish it from the rest of the crowd".[32] MovieHole was also negative, thanking the lack theatrical release in North America as viewers would not waste money on it, comparing it to Uwe Boll's movies but still noted that the only appeal of the movie were its fighting scenbes.[33]

Response by Katsuhiro Harada

 
Tekken game director Katsuhiro Harada expressed disapproval over the movie

Katsuhiro Harada, director of the Tekken video game series, criticized the film: "That Hollywood movie is terrible. We were not able to supervise that movie; it was a cruel contract. I'm not interested in that movie".[34] Reacting to Harada's comments, Nick Chester of Destructoid said the film is "not great, but 'terrible' is a stretch", saying that it "does a decent job of trying to stay true to the look and feel of the [games]" and that "the fight scenes weren't bad".[34]

When the CGI film Tekken: Blood Vengeance (2011) was announced, Harada said that he wanted to stop people from remembering the live-action film and instead focus on the CGI one as it would be more faithful to the franchise.[35] However, he also said "That doesn't have anything to do with it this time," Harada insisted. "We're not trying to rewrite those wrongs. Fans are always asking us for a 3D movie. This is our response to them... We want to make a movie that everyone can enjoy, though. Not just Tekken fans."[36]

Prequel

Crystal Sky Pictures later produced a prequel to Tekken, named Tekken 2: Kazuya's Revenge, directed by Wych Kaos and starring Kane Kosugi. The film was released on August 6, 2014 and focuses on Kazuya Mishima's story years before the film's beginning.[37][38][39][40]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Tekkan at the IMDb". IMDB. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
  2. ^ "Tekken (2009)". Box Office Mojo. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2011-12-19.
  3. ^ "Tekken". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  4. ^ "Tekken (2009)". FilmBeat. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  5. ^ "Namco Confirms Tekken Feature Film". IGN. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  6. ^ (PDF). Crystal Sky. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2008. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  7. ^ . GameSpot. Archived from the original on May 24, 2009. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  8. ^ (PDF). Crystal Sky. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 22, 2008. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  9. ^ "Director Charles Stone III talks about the Tekken movie". Movie Web. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  10. ^ "Director Talks Tekken". IGN. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  11. ^ "'Marked for Death' Director to Tackle Tekken". Wired. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d "Dwight H. Little Talks Tekken Exclusive". Movieweb. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  13. ^ a b "First Look: Jon Foo as Jin Kazama in Tekken Movie". First Showing. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  14. ^ "Tons of Behind the Scenes Footage from TEKKEN Featuring the Fights and Stunt Choreography". Collider. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  15. ^ "Dwight Little Interview, "Tekken"". Gavin Schmitt. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  16. ^ "Little gets behind 'Tekken' movie". Variety. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  17. ^ "Tekken movie interview". Youtube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
  18. ^ "Martial arts actor Jon Foo is in Manila to promote film Tekken". Pep. Retrieved September 19, 2022.
  19. ^ . Sdtekken.com. 2009-11-04. Archived from the original on January 3, 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  20. ^ "映画「TEKKEN」オフィシャルサイト". .warnerbros.co.jp. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  21. ^ a b . The Philippine Star. Archived from the original on 2016-06-05.
  22. ^
  23. ^ "Tekken Movie at HMV". hmv.com. 2010-07-28.
  24. ^ "Anchor Bay Films Acquires Tekken". ComingSoon.net. 2010-09-13. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
  25. ^ "Tekken (2009)". Rotten Tomatoes. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  26. ^ Tekken (Blu-ray): DVD Talk Review of the Blu-ray - Brian Orndorf, DVD Talk, July 13, 2011
  27. ^ a b "Tekken (Blu-ray) (Region B)". DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on August 15, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2017.
  28. ^ a b "Tekken". Martial Arts and Action movies. June 15, 2014. from the original on September 12, 2017. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
  29. ^ a b "Tekken (2010) – Review". Roobla. April 30, 2011. from the original on September 12, 2017. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
  30. ^ . BeyondHollywood. February 17, 2009. Archived from the original on September 12, 2017. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
  31. ^ "Tekken DVD Review". The Fandom Post. July 19, 2011. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  32. ^ DVD Verdict Review - Tekken (Blu-ray) (Region B) Archived 2013-08-15 at archive.today - Paul Pritchard, DVD Verdict, June 10, 2011
  33. ^ . MovieHole. Archived from the original on July 5, 2011. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  34. ^ a b Chester, Nick (2010-08-10). "Tekken Boss Calls Tekken Film "Terrible"". Destructoid. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
  35. ^ "Interview: Katsuhiro Harada talks new Tekken CG Film". Destructoid. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  36. ^ "Tekken Blood Vengeance details". Eurogamer. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  37. ^ Gallagher, Brian (22 May 2012). "Tekken: Rise of the Tournament Prequel in Development". movieweb.com. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  38. ^ Scullion, Chris (13 January 2014). "Second Tekken movie reportedly begins filming". computerandvideogames.com. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  39. ^ "Today, the official website of actor Kane Kosugi issued a correction and apology". Kotaku. 2014-01-14. Retrieved 2014-01-15.
  40. ^ "Trailer: Tekken 2: Kazuya's Revenge". Kung Fu Cinema. Archived from the original on 2014-08-16. Retrieved 2014-08-30.

External links

tekken, 2009, film, tekken, 鉄拳, 2009, american, science, fiction, martial, arts, film, directed, dwight, little, distributed, warner, bros, anchor, entertainment, written, alan, mcelroy, loosely, based, fighting, game, series, same, name, story, follows, kazam. Tekken 鉄拳 is a 2009 American science fiction martial arts film directed by Dwight Little and distributed by Warner Bros and Anchor Bay Entertainment It was written by Alan B McElroy and is loosely based on the fighting game series of the same name Its story follows Jin Kazama in his attempts to enter the Iron Fist Tournament in order to avenge the loss of his mother Jun Kazama by confronting the forces of the city that are also holding the competition It stars Jon Foo Kelly Overton Cary Hiroyuki Tagawa Ian Anthony Dale Cung Le Darrin Dewitt Henson Luke Goss Marian Zapico Lateef Crowder Candice Hillebrand Anton Kasabov and Roger Huerta TekkenJapanese film posterDirected byDwight LittleScreenplay byAlan B McElroyBased onTekkenby NamcoProduced bySteven PaulBenedict CarverStarringJon FooKelly OvertonCary Hiroyuki TagawaIan Anthony DaleCung LeDarrin Dewitt HensonLuke GossMarian ZapicoLateef CrowderCandice HillebrandAnton KasabovRoger HuertaNarrated byJon FooKelly OvertonCinematographyBrian J ReynoldsEdited byDavid ChecelMusic byJohn HunterProductioncompanyCrystal Sky PicturesDistributed byAnchor Bay EntertainmentRelease datesNovember 5 2009 2009 11 05 AFI Film Festival March 20 2010 2010 03 20 Japan Running time87 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 30 million 1 Box office 1 7 million 2 The film was originally announced by the Tekken publisher of games Namco Bandai in 2002 but did not start development until 2007 due to two directors wanting to handle the movie Experienced in sports movies Little decided to make Tekken focused on realism resulting in the removal of supernatural elements from the franchise as well as comic relief characters This also led to the inclusion of martial artists as the main cast to produce well choreographed battles The movie was produced by Crystal Sky Pictures and premiered on November 5 2009 at the AFI Film Festival and was released in Japan on March 20 2010 It grossed 1 7 million worldwide 3 The film was generally praised for its fighting scenes but criticized for its unfaithful narrative and poor acting within the main cast The criticism also came from the games director Katsuhiro Harada too and the desire to produce a more accessible movie with Tekken Blood Vengeance two years later Nevertheless Tekken spawned the 2014 prequel Tekken 2 Kazuya s Revenge Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 5 Reception 5 1 Response by Katsuhiro Harada 6 Prequel 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditIn the late 2010s 8 megacorporations divide up the world around them the biggest being Tekken Corporation which controls North America In order to placate the masses the corporation s Chairman Heihachi Mishima sponsors the King of Iron Fist Tournament or Iron Fist in which fighters from the 8 corporations battle until one is left standing and receives a lifetime of stardom and wealth In a slum area surrounding Tekken City called the Anvil lives the rebellious young man Jin Kazama who makes money as a contraband runner for resistance groups that fight against the Tekken Corporation Jin has been raised and trained by his mother Jun who never speaks of Jin s father claiming he is dead One night Jin is targeted by the Jackhammers the elite specs group that patrols the Anvil and ensures the safety of Tekken City Jun is killed by the Jackhammers instead and Jin swears revenge against Heihachi In the ruins of his former home he finds a Tekken Fighter I D belonging to Jun revealing she was once an Iron Fist fighter After defeating the disgraced Marshall Law Jin goes to Tekken City sponsored by former boxer Steve Fox Upon entering Tekken City Jin befriends mixed martial artist Christie Monteiro He wins the match against Miguel Caballero Rojo nearly killing him in a fit of rage Heihachi s son Kazuya Mishima is impressed and offers Jin a place in Tekken Corporation but Jin refuses Later that night Jin is attacked by Nina Williams at Kazuya s request Jin survives the assassination attempt thanks to Christie s interference Jin vows to win Iron Fist and to kill both Heihachi and Kazuya When he gives Fox Jun s ID he realizes he is her son telling him that he knew her During the quarter finals Christie defeats Nina Kazuya then has Heihachi imprisoned effectively seizing control of Tekken Jin narrowly defeats the elite swordsman Yoshimitsu Kazuya says rules have changed and so they must now fight to the death Jin Christie and Steve try to escape along with Raven leaving Nina and Anna Williams and Sergei Dragunov behind Kazuya brings down some guards causing a firefight Steve Christie and Raven cover Jin but he walks across Heihachi s cell Angry Jin tries to taunt Heihachi saying he is responsible for killing Jin s mother However since Heihachi is their only mean of escaping Tekken Steve frees Heihachi and joins the group In the gunfight Raven is wounded and recaptured In the warehouse that Jin uses as protection Heihachi reveals to Jin that Kazuya raped his mother making him Jin s father and left her for dead Heihachi took her out of Tekken City to the Anvil to keep her alive Heihachi states the corporation s true purpose is to restore order to the world Later on the group is located by Jackhammers who kill Steve Fox in a firefight and recapture the rest of the escapees Before taking them back to Iron Fist Kazuya orders the Jackhammers to execute Heihachi Back in Tekken City Kazuya changes the rules of the tournament and now wants the fighters to fight to the death In the Finals Jin is forced to fight against Bryan Fury who had already killed Sergei Dragunov in a death match while Kazuya holds Christie in the control room At first he is outmatched but remembering his mother s teachings Jin defeats Bryan Angered about Jin s victory Kazuya enters the tournament himself armed with two moon axes The weaponless Jin is saved by Christie and pins Kazuya who baits Jin by claiming that he remembers how Jun put up quite a fight Jin defeats Kazuya but refuses to kill his father Jin walks out of Tekken City s gate and is saluted by the Jackhammers symbolizing his new role as CEO of Tekken Corporation After the credits Kazuya realizes that he lost control of the Jackhammers who spared Heihachi following his command Cast EditSee also List of Tekken characters The cast of the movie includes 4 Jon Foo as Jin Kazama Jason Del Rosario as Young Jin Kazama Dallas James Liu as Jin Kazama age 6 Kelly Overton as Christie Monteiro Cary Hiroyuki Tagawa as Heihachi Mishima Ian Anthony Dale as Kazuya Mishima Cung Le as Marshall Law Darrin Dewitt Henson as Raven Luke Goss as Steve Fox Tamlyn Tomita as Jun Kazama Candice Hillebrand as Nina Williams Marian Zapico as Anna Williams Gary Daniels as Bryan Fury Gary Stearns as Yoshimitsu Roger Huerta as Miguel Rojo Lateef Crowder as Eddy Gordo Anton Kasabov as Sergei Dragunov Mircea Monroe as Kara John Pyper Ferguson as Bonner Kiko Ellsworth as Denslow Blake Shields as Hansu Jason Richter as Bonner s AssociateProduction Edit In order to portray a sense of realism Cyril Raffaelli left was cast as the main fight choreography Talks about making Tekken into a movie have been underway since June 2002 with Namco Bandai stating production would start in 2003 5 The film was meant to be released in 2005 6 It was reported that the production company Crystal Sky Pictures had acquired the film rights for 60 million After several years of hiatus the project resurfaced after a teaser poster appeared on the web in October 2008 7 This was mostly due to the global success of Lara Croft Tomb Raider as well as the long lasting popularity of the Tekken franchise 8 Originally Charles Stone III was going to be film s director who teased in 2004 it would different from other adaptations like Mortal Kombat or Tomb Raider He claimed the narrative would heavily focus on the characters to provoke a more dramatic style He aimed to get famous actors like Jackie Chan and Jet Li believing the budget would be enough to get such skilled actors The production of the movie was set to start during 2005 However the project saw a major change in staff members 9 Stone was investigating K 1 in during the making of the movie while taking notes from Enter the Dragon 1973 with the objective of the making the final product both accessible and realistic 10 In 2007 Dwight H Little signed to become the film s new director 11 The film originated from the next director s experience with martial arts based films including Marked for Death 1990 and Rapid Fire 1992 Dwight H Little was called by the producer to direct another martial art movie Tekken which he had only knowledge due to his two children being gamers of the fighting game franchise Little requested help from writer Alan B McElroy who had done Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers and Rapid Fire while doing research for the movie The director and writer agreed to remove the supernatural elements from the film most notably Jin Kazama s devil mutation as well as the campy elements from the franchise the animal fighter once the film was being created They wanted to focus more on the sports like story like Rocky which is associated with family bonds as well as multiple cultures The characters used in the narrative were chosen since they came across as the most realistic ones in contrast to the supernatural Devil Jin which they felt was more fitting for a more anime film 12 Luke Goss said that the team intended to make the film R rated 13 The main stuntman was Cyril Raffaelli who revealed the movie has a total of 9 fights with each containing nearly 50 moves 14 The film finished shooting in May 2009 13 In order to bring more realism to the fights the team used real fighters including Lateef Crowder Roger Huerta and Cung Le In order to have more supporting fighters the team also got Gary Daniels which gave them the need of the main character requiring to be played as a real fighter too rather than use two actors for the stunts Finding Jon Foo as Jin proved to be a difficult task due to how they needed somebody who was young skilled and handsome They met the actor in Thailand Among other actors include Cary Hiroyuki Tagawa whom they found fitting for Heihachi Mishima as well as the skilled Ian Anthony Dale 12 The film was shot in Shreveport Louisiana Little attempted to cast Danielle Harris based on her experience with Marked For Death but she did not appear Nevertheless he was surprised by Gary Daniels s performance as Brian Fury Though the narrative appears to explore political events due to how the Tekken tournament has changed the world there were no intentions to provide such context Instead the main conflict of the story involves Jin Kazama s relationship with his family most notably the villain Kazuya Mishima While the film does not offer a proper closure to the family struggle Little claimed they added scenes about him and Heihachi to provide content for a sequel should it be approved Though Jin has two love interests in the movie Little claims the first one Jin has never become serious citing the character s young age as the cause 15 Little describes the film s story as that of a rebel who wishes to give freedom to his people following their restricted lives in their hometown 16 Jon Foo felt honored to play Jin s character in the live action film based on the series He says he is a fan of the Tekken games Still he found it difficult to play Jin as he spent three months on a diet in order to do the fighting moves for the live action film 17 In recording for the movie Thailand to do a screen test He also flew to America to do another screen test Foo was glad he was chosen for the role of Jin because it was the first he played the lead in his career Among several scenes Foo favorited Jin s and Brain s battle 18 In shooting the film the team originally wanted to use Europe but ended up in North America in the need of arenas They ended in Shreveport Louisiana because they had built a new public arena down the road While the team used CGI visuals for the arenas there was a mix of real buildings as well as crowds that viewed the battles which was especially helpful since they did not have a big budget In regards to battles the staff aimed to make homages to the video games with Little specifying the faithful recreation of Eddy Gordo s moves They compared the fighting styles they used with Gladiator 2000 when dealing with the Yoshimitsu and 12 Release EditThe film was screened at the Mann s Criterion Theatre in Santa Monica on November 5 2009 as part of the AFM Film Festival to find a solid distributor 19 It was released in Japan on March 20 2010 through Warner Bros Pictures Japan 20 The film also premiered on July 27 2010 in Singapore and August 4 in the Philippines via Pioneer Films 21 One week before the Philippine premiere Jon Foo visited Manila to promote the film 21 22 Due to its poor reception the film never saw a wide theatrical release in the United States and was released direct to video instead They had a theatrical distributor and we had a deal for theatrical and just because of the new economic times and the way business is done with DVD that company went out of business Then we were left as orphans and Anchor Bay made the release which the director found helpful 12 The film was released on DVD and Blu ray Disc in Japan on August 11 2010 In the United Kingdom Optimum Released and distributed the film on May 2 2011 23 Anchor Bay Entertainment released the film in the United States on DVD and Blu ray Disc on July 19 2011 24 Reception EditTekken holds a critical score of 0 based on 6 reviews and has a 31 approval rating by audiences on Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 2 68 10 25 Brian Orndorf of DVD Talk gave the film two stars out of five writing Tekken is a failure on many levels but it does make a plucky attempt to replicate the flippy floppy nature of the fighting elements creating a limb snapping effort of escapism surrounded by bland writing and sleepy performances He opined that director Dwight H Little show s off an impressive spectrum of fighting styles and intensity though he goes a little crazy with trendy cinematographic choices and hyperactive editing 26 Rating it Guilty DVD Verdict enjoyed how faithful are most of the character s designs to the games alongside the mutuals but with criticism aimed towards battles which employ weaponry However he felt that the protagonist s quest to seek revenge lacks focus 27 Martial Arts Action Movies claimed while the film seems universally hated due to how unfaithful is to the source material and bland storyline he still liked thanks to the visuals and fight choreography 28 Roobia said that most of the budget went to the visuals as he felt that the cast had poor performance acting but still found it accessible to all audiences 29 Critics enjoyed Jon Foo s appearance and movies but criticized some traits of Jin s portrayal BeyondHollywood thought Jon Foo s appearance might appeal to viewers based on his similarities with Jin 30 Rating it B The Fandom Post disliked the love interests presented to Jin as well as his fights in the Iron Fist Tournament where Jin ends up joining the finals without focus on the previous ones Nevertheless the writer felt the film was enjoyable 31 DVD Verdict criticized how Jin was lacking most of his important traits most notably his Devil Gene 27 Although Martial Arts and Action Movies criticized Foo s acting to the point of making Jin emotionless his fight sequences were praised 28 Roobla also praised the fight sequences most notably Jin s fight against Eddie Gordo 29 Paul Pritchard of DVD Verdict compared Tekken to other video game film adaptations In the grand scheme of things Tekken bests both Street Fighter The Ultimate Battle 1994 and Street Fighter The Legend of Chun Li 2009 movies with ease but lacks the goofy charms of Mortal Kombat Had it embraced its roots more openly the film may well have offered more excitement As it is Tekken is just an average action flick with nothing to distinguish it from the rest of the crowd 32 MovieHole was also negative thanking the lack theatrical release in North America as viewers would not waste money on it comparing it to Uwe Boll s movies but still noted that the only appeal of the movie were its fighting scenbes 33 Response by Katsuhiro Harada Edit Tekken game director Katsuhiro Harada expressed disapproval over the movie Katsuhiro Harada director of the Tekken video game series criticized the film That Hollywood movie is terrible We were not able to supervise that movie it was a cruel contract I m not interested in that movie 34 Reacting to Harada s comments Nick Chester of Destructoid said the film is not great but terrible is a stretch saying that it does a decent job of trying to stay true to the look and feel of the games and that the fight scenes weren t bad 34 When the CGI film Tekken Blood Vengeance 2011 was announced Harada said that he wanted to stop people from remembering the live action film and instead focus on the CGI one as it would be more faithful to the franchise 35 However he also said That doesn t have anything to do with it this time Harada insisted We re not trying to rewrite those wrongs Fans are always asking us for a 3D movie This is our response to them We want to make a movie that everyone can enjoy though Not just Tekken fans 36 Prequel EditMain article Tekken 2 Kazuya s Revenge Crystal Sky Pictures later produced a prequel to Tekken named Tekken 2 Kazuya s Revenge directed by Wych Kaos and starring Kane Kosugi The film was released on August 6 2014 and focuses on Kazuya Mishima s story years before the film s beginning 37 38 39 40 See also EditList of films based on video gamesReferences Edit Tekkan at the IMDb IMDB Retrieved 29 August 2012 Tekken 2009 Box Office Mojo Box Office Mojo Retrieved 2011 12 19 Tekken Box Office Mojo Retrieved 2020 02 21 Tekken 2009 FilmBeat Retrieved September 20 2022 Namco Confirms Tekken Feature Film IGN Retrieved September 20 2022 Gaga weighs major investment in live action TEKKEN PDF Crystal Sky Archived from the original PDF on November 12 2008 Retrieved September 20 2022 鉄拳 の映画の制作開始が決定 GameSpot Archived from the original on May 24 2009 Retrieved September 20 2022 Crystal Sky game to play 60 mil Tekken feature PDF Crystal Sky Archived from the original PDF on November 22 2008 Retrieved September 20 2022 Director Charles Stone III talks about the Tekken movie Movie Web Retrieved September 19 2022 Director Talks Tekken IGN Retrieved September 19 2022 Marked for Death Director to Tackle Tekken Wired Retrieved September 19 2022 a b c d Dwight H Little Talks Tekken Exclusive Movieweb Retrieved September 19 2022 a b First Look Jon Foo as Jin Kazama in Tekken Movie First Showing Retrieved September 19 2022 Tons of Behind the Scenes Footage from TEKKEN Featuring the Fights and Stunt Choreography Collider Retrieved September 19 2022 Dwight Little Interview Tekken Gavin Schmitt Retrieved September 19 2022 Little gets behind Tekken movie Variety Retrieved September 20 2022 Tekken movie interview Youtube Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved September 10 2017 Martial arts actor Jon Foo is in Manila to promote film Tekken Pep Retrieved September 19 2022 TEKKEN Movie Premiere SDTEKKEN COM Tekken News Resource Sdtekken com 2009 11 04 Archived from the original on January 3 2010 Retrieved 2010 03 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link 映画 TEKKEN オフィシャルサイト warnerbros co jp Retrieved 2010 03 30 a b Jon Foo The Tekken Star is a Funny Guy The Philippine Star Archived from the original on 2016 06 05 ABS CBN Tekken Star Jon Foo in Manila Tekken Movie at HMV hmv com 2010 07 28 Anchor Bay Films Acquires Tekken ComingSoon net 2010 09 13 Retrieved 2010 11 11 Tekken 2009 Rotten Tomatoes CBS Interactive Retrieved 17 July 2018 Tekken Blu ray DVD Talk Review of the Blu ray Brian Orndorf DVD Talk July 13 2011 a b Tekken Blu ray Region B DVD Verdict Archived from the original on August 15 2013 Retrieved August 26 2017 a b Tekken Martial Arts and Action movies June 15 2014 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved September 11 2017 a b Tekken 2010 Review Roobla April 30 2011 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved September 11 2017 First Look at Jon Foo as Jin Kazama in Tekken Movie BeyondHollywood February 17 2009 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved September 11 2017 Tekken DVD Review The Fandom Post July 19 2011 Retrieved November 19 2019 DVD Verdict Review Tekken Blu ray Region B Archived 2013 08 15 at archive today Paul Pritchard DVD Verdict June 10 2011 Clint checks out Tekken the movie MovieHole Archived from the original on July 5 2011 Retrieved September 20 2022 a b Chester Nick 2010 08 10 Tekken Boss Calls Tekken Film Terrible Destructoid Retrieved 2010 11 11 Interview Katsuhiro Harada talks new Tekken CG Film Destructoid Retrieved September 20 2022 Tekken Blood Vengeance details Eurogamer Retrieved September 20 2022 Gallagher Brian 22 May 2012 Tekken Rise of the Tournament Prequel in Development movieweb com Retrieved 14 January 2014 Scullion Chris 13 January 2014 Second Tekken movie reportedly begins filming computerandvideogames com Retrieved 14 January 2014 Today the official website of actor Kane Kosugi issued a correction and apology Kotaku 2014 01 14 Retrieved 2014 01 15 Trailer Tekken 2 Kazuya s Revenge Kung Fu Cinema Archived from the original on 2014 08 16 Retrieved 2014 08 30 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Tekken 2009 film Official website in Japanese Tekken at IMDb Tekken at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tekken 2009 film amp oldid 1129726615, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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