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Thread: Man of Tai Chi with Keanu Reeves

  1. #76
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    On iTunes Sep 27

    There's another trailer if you follow the hyperlink.
    Video: Martial arts movie 'Man of Tai Chi' 3rd trailer
    By Can Tran
    Sep 3, 2013 - 14 hours ago in Entertainment

    A new trailer has been released for the upcoming martial arts movie, directed by Keanu Reeves, "Man of Tai Chi." It will hit iTunes on September 27 before a November 1 limited theatrical screening.
    A third trailer, the newest trailer, has been released for the upcoming Chinese martial arts movie called “Man of Tai Chi.” This film is the first film ever directed by Keanu Reeves. Man of Tai Chi, which stars Tiger Hu Chen as the main character, will be available on iTunes come September 27. There will be a limited theatrical screening on November 1. Man of Tai Chi brings Reeves and Chen together as the two of them worked together in the Matrix Trilogy (“The Matrix,” “The Matrix: Reloaded,” and “The Matrix: Revolutions” with the former playing the main hero Neo and the latter who trained the actors in the martial arts.
    In this movie, Chen plays himself as Tiger Chen while Reeves plays the movie's antagonist Donaka Mark. Mark, who heads up a security firm, makes money on the side running an illegal underground fight club in with martial artists fight each other to the death with wealthy clients paying top dollar to watch the bouts. Tiger, a user of Tai Chi Chuan, gets dragged into it by Mark. Man of Tai Chi definitely has a lot of fight scenes. Fall and Winter will be rather busy for Reeves; this December, Reeves' newest movie “47 Ronin” hits theaters.
    Gene Ching
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  2. #77
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    Now showing at TIFF

    And there are a few new reviews in the wake...

    Man of Tai Chi: Toronto 2013 – first look review
    Keanu Reeves' directorial debut plays out as an astounding martial arts showcase and a lousy Hong Kong cop thriller


    Reducing stress, improving mobility ... Man of Tai Chi, directed by Keanu Reeves.
    Care homes take note! Tai chi will reduce stress, improve general mobility and – according to Keanu Reeves's directorial debut – let practitioners send a Russian boxer the size of a phone box sprawling.

    Funded by the China Film Group and starring Reeves' Matrix fight choreographer and friend, Man of Tai Chi plays out as an astounding martial arts showcase and a lousy Hong Kong cop thriller. Tiger Hu Chen stars as delivery driver, Tiger Chen Lin-Hu, who moonlights as a fists-for-hire fight star. Reeves appears as Donaka Mark, the black-suited corporate kingpin who recruits Chen, coaxes him into using his gift for monetary gain, then broadcasts his spiritual descent on the internet for an audience of super-rich fight fans. Chen's tai chi teacher, Master Yang (Yu Hai), balances Keanu's Yin. Karen Mok plays the honest cop hoping to shut down the fight ring and return tai chi to its rightful place in the parks of north London.

    Man of Tai Chi is all hard rock and fast cars, blinding fight scenes and soul-crushing dialogue. It's rarely on-point, frequently absurd. But it displays passion by the fistful. Chen – a blur of limbs in battle – holds the lead with a quiet soulfulness. Fans of Keanu's unique acting style will thrill at his new special move: howling maniacally into the camera. You have to love the guy. Only Keanu could make a character as overwrought as Donaka Mark as compelling as a dial tone.

    Action specialist Yuen Woo-ping directs the fight scenes with an eye on packing in the punches without shedding too much blood to up the age rating. Stars of MMA, Taekwondo and Indonesian pencak silat (represented by a special appearance from The Raid star Iko Uwais) flit across Chen's path to receive their pummelling before dropping back into one of the many plot holes.

    Reeves rolls into directing with amateurish enthusiasm. He slaps on the jump cuts, riddles the film with time lapse photography and strobe effects. Only rarely does any of it hit home, mostly it tumbles into parody. The moneyed fight fans are shown a greatest hits reel of Tiger's evolution as a fighter. "Temple, Money, Power," reads the on-screen text. "Kill". The voiceover announces the name Tiger Chen. I was waiting for it to say "Der-ek Zoo-land-er".

    There's no fun to be had in attacking Reeves or his ambition. He's put his passion on display, you feel churlish ripping it down. But Man of Tai Chi presents a director trying everything to achieve anything. His Chi is restless, his balance off. "Slower," says tai chi teacher Yang. "Slower, slower". Sage advice, master.
    Gene Ching
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  3. #78
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    Thumbs up

    I watched this last night.

    It has that classic martial art movie theme: Good guy gets caught up in underground fighting, has a need to continue, does so.

    The choreography is nice, as always from Woo-Ping, Yuen. Some nice stylized fights with various styles. They did a good job finding the right people to fill the roles of the two characters that perform Taiji.

    Taijiquan fans should all watch this movie, as it is a great showcase for Taiji in a kungfu movie. (you dont see this much)

    Light wire work, but done well.

    There was a light attempt to address the 'mma' aspect of fighting, but very light, for the most part, this is a traditionally styled kungfu movie.

    Keanu Reeves plays the villain, which you find out immediately in the film. Imagine Neo, but mean.

    The over all message in this movie is a positive one however. There is a lightheartedness to the main character which draws you in to liking him right away.

    I don't really rate things, but if we go by a strict thumbs up or thumbs down approach, I give this one a thumbs up. It should be a light fun watch for any fan of kungfu movies.

    And who doesnt love watching a product of Woo-Ping?!

    IMO don't go into watching this for keanu reeves, you will disappoint yourself, but rather, watch this for Lin-Hu, Chen and what Woo-Ping does with his skills. It's shiny.
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  4. #79
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    It's on Xfinity too

    Man of Tai Chi 2013 R

    Chinese with English subtitles. Keanu Reeves stars in a tale about a martial artist who competes in a fight club. As the fights intensify so does his will to survive. Keanu Reeves, Tiger Hu Chen.

    Watch with XFINITY ON DEMAND™
    I caught this promo Keanu did for Xfinity that totally put me off in that weird annoying way of Keanu's. It was like Keanu trying to be all martial arts tough by doing an impersonation of Seagal.
    Gene Ching
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  5. #80
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    Excellent article

    Keanu’s Excellent Directing Adventure
    Keanu Reeves was Actor and Director for ‘Man of Tai Chi’


    K.C. Chan/RADiUS-TWC
    Keanu Reeves, right, directing Tiger Hu Chen on the set of “Man of Tai Chi,” a martial arts film Mr. Reeves both directs
    and stars in.
    By DAVID MARCHESE
    Published: October 18, 2013

    Keanu Reeves shuffled onto the terrace of a high-rise in the financial district of Manhattan, tossed a rumpled pack of American Spirit cigarettes and a half-eaten Clif Bar on the coffee table, and gingerly lowered himself onto the couch. Tall, with scruffy beard and mustache, he’d returned to this temporary home fresh from intense fight training for his next project, a thriller called “John Wick.” With wisps of gray visible in the long, dark brown hair, the 49-year-old Mr. Reeves called himself, multiple times, “a salty dog” of the film business, and if he’s embracing the real-life role of grizzled lifer, he’s also relishing the confidence that comes with experience.


    RADiUS-TWC
    Mr. Chen and Mr. Reeves in the movie.


    Universal Pictures
    Keanu Reeves in “47 Ronin.”

    K.C. Chan/RADiUS-TWC
    Mr. Reeves on the set of “Man of Tai Chi,” his directing debut.

    The laid-back star was describing a moment when he went off-script in his latest film, the steely martial arts action picture “Man of Tai Chi.” As a master watching his protégé lose his innocence, “I wanted to take a risk and show something elemental,” he said. “So I improvised and let out a demon scream. It was freeing. Some people on set were like, ‘Really?’ ” Mr. Reeves gave a boyish grin. “But the director liked it.”

    In this instance actor and director were one and the same. “Man of Tai Chi,” opening on Nov. 1, represents a key point in Mr. Reeves’s transition from leading man to behind-the-scenes player. The film, his directorial debut, stars Mr. Reeves’s friend and the former “Matrix” trilogy stuntman Tiger Hu Chen as a Chinese deliveryman and student of traditional combat styles seduced into entering the high-tech world of illegal prizefighting by the darkly mysterious master Donaka Mark.

    Shot in Hong Kong and Beijing, with dialogue in English, Mandarin and Cantonese, the film represented a rare opportunity for Mr. Reeves, who has been more hands-on with his projects of late, co-producing and co-starring in a small romantic comedy, “Henry’s Crime” (2011), and co-producing and conducting on-camera interviews for “Side by Side” (2012), a brainy documentary about the movie industry’s shift from film to digital. (An unabashed movie-tech geek, Mr. Reeves giddily rubbed his hands together when discussing different shutter angles and frame rates in “Man of Tai Chi.”)

    “I was never the kind of actor who was only interested in my own performance and that’s it,” said Mr. Reeves, dressed in an olive-green military-style jacket, black cargo pants and heavy boots. “I’ve always enjoyed being on sets and seeing where the camera was going and looking at the shooting schedule and understanding how the production is put together and how I fit into the story as a whole.”

    Mr. Reeves spent years “carrying the begging bowl,” as he put it, seeking financing for this “allegory about the pressures and seductions of the modern world,” themes not terribly dissimilar from those of “Side by Side.” When the opportunity to make “Man of Tai Chi” arose — thanks largely to a deal with the state-run China Film Group — he was ready. A lifelong fan of martial arts movies with fond memories of seeing “Five Fingers of Death” and “Enter the Dragon” in Times Square theaters with his stepfather, he explained: “I’ve been doing this for a while. I didn’t feel like I had to make the phone call to anybody asking” — here he feigned panic — “ ‘What do I do?’ I felt like I could see the forest and trees.”

    This shift from actor fully capable of throwing a bullet-time punch or two as Neo in the “Matrix” movies to filmmaker made sense to Carl Rinsch, who directed Mr. Reeves in the coming 3-D samurai spectacle “47 Ronin,” due Christmas Day. “When I signed on to work with Keanu it was clear I was getting not an actor but a collaborator,” Mr. Rinsch said. “Keanu was there for script development and preproduction. He’s got this enthusiasm for the entire process that really brings you back to the joy and naïveté all filmmakers had when they were kids making movies in their backyard.”

    For Mr. Chen, who had little acting experience, Mr. Reeves’s passion for that process was pulse quickening: “Keanu wanted me to go over the top with my energy every take. If I went 100 percent, it wasn’t enough. I had to go 120 percent. After scenes I’d feel like I was having a heart attack. ”

    There are those for whom the concept of acting advice from Keanu Reeves may register as a sort of one-hand-clapping Zen koan. It’s hard to think of another major star for which the question of whether they’re actually any good at their job remains open to debate. Witness the longevity of the popular “Point Break Live!” theater parody, wherein audience members are invited to take on the role of Mr. Reeves’s character, Johnny Utah (cue the clueless California-dude accents). In 2011 the critics A. O. Scott and Manohla Dargis of The New York Times entertained the question, “Is Keanu Reeves a good bad actor or a bad good actor?”

    “I get it totally,” Mr. Reeves said. “People say, ‘Another inscrutable deadpan performance.’ I mostly find these things amusing. Something like ‘Point Break Live!’ is a funny idea, I can understand that. Ultimately you hope that people like what you do. It’s a drag when they don’t. The weirdest thing for me is when people assume that I’m the person I’m playing. So then it becomes, ‘You wanted my performance to be different, but you also didn’t think it was a performance?’ That’s puzzling to me.”

    Mr. Reeves leaned forward on the couch and let his lank hair cover his face. “Maybe it’s because I did ‘Bill and Ted’ so early in my career and that stuck with people,” he said wryly. “Maybe my performance was too good.”

    The director Alex Winter, who played Bill in the aforementioned 1989 buddy comedy “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” and the 1991 follow-up, “Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey,” said that the popular notion of his longtime friend as some sort of beautiful cipher is misguided. “He’s one of the brightest and most engaged actors I know,” Mr. Winter said. “Just look at the thing he chose to do for the first movie he directed. He didn’t do some small two-hander. He did a logistically complex martial arts film. The idea of him being either Bill or Neo or just a pretty face is wildly inaccurate. Just because he doesn’t talk publicly about his internal life and interests doesn’t mean they don’t exist.”

    The “Bill & Ted” screenwriters, Chris Matheson and Ed Solomon, have completed a script for a third film about those two big-hearted dim bulbs from San Dimas, Calif., and Mr. Winter said, he, the writers and Mr. Reeves were working to get it financed.

    “Wouldn’t it be surreal to meet those dudes again?” asked a beaming Mr. Reeves.

    Before then, the Beirut-born, Toronto-raised Mr. Reeves will be seen in “47 Ronin” as Kai, a half-Japanese, half-English outcast who joins a band of banished warriors on a revenge mission. It’s his first big-budget Hollywood studio film since “The Day the Earth Stood Still” in 2008, a gap he admits was not necessarily his choice. “I wasn’t being asked to do things,” he said with a shrug. “Some things came up, but they weren’t intriguing. I wasn’t going to sit around and wait for an amazing studio project to appear. I’m a creative person, and I want to make stuff. It just so happened that the things I was interested in making and that I had an opportunity to make were lovely films like ‘A Scanner Darkly’ and ‘Thumbsucker.’ ”

    Mr. Reeves explained that he had hopes, rather than plans, of directing again, and for now is enjoying wearing the actor’s hat. That has recently required some practice. After the interview for this article, Mr. Reeves would be off to a shooting range for some “John Wick” firearms training.

    “I’ve crossed seas and oceans,” Mr. Reeves declared in a mock tragic English accent as he rose creakily from the couch. “I’m a hardened vet.”

    Then he returned to his regular voice. “The truth is I have no cynicism,” he said. “At my core, I’m still in love with acting and the movies.”
    Y'all caught Keanu on Kimmel, yes?
    Keanu Reeves Defends Jimmy's T'ai Chi
    Gene Ching
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  6. #81
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Y'all caught Keanu on Kimmel, yes?
    Keanu Reeves Defends Jimmy's T'ai Chi
    Uh...no. But I did catch him on FALLON
    "The true meaning of a given movement in a form is not its application, but rather the unlimited potential of the mind to provide muscular and skeletal support for that movement." Gregory Fong

  7. #82
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    Doh!

    Obviously I've scrambled my Jimmys.
    Gene Ching
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  8. #83
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    Don't ever do that Homer. I'm pretty sure you can get arrested for that in more than one Southern state.
    "if its ok for shaolin wuseng to break his vow then its ok for me to sneak behind your house at 3 in the morning and bang your dog if buddha is in your heart then its ok"-Bawang

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  9. #84
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    Just gotta stay outta them Southern states

    This is a day late (and a dollar short...)

    Keanu Reeves to appear at 'Man of Tai Chi' IMAX screening in New York City
    October 23, 2013

    Keanu Reeves, who directed and starred in the martial-arts movie "Man of Tai Chi," is making a special appearance at a sneak-preview IMAX screening of "Man of Tai Chi" at AMC 34th Street in New York City at 7 p.m. EDT on Oct. 24, 2013.

    On Oct. 24, 2013, "Man of Tai Chi" is also having sneak-preview screenings at 7 p.m. local time in Los Angeles, Boston, Seattle and San Francisco.

    RADiUS-TWC's "Man of Tai Chi" had its VOD premiere on Sept. 27, 2013. The movie opens in U.S. and Canadian cinemas on Nov. 1, 2013.

    In "Man of Tai Chi," Reeves stars as the wealthy owner of a Beijing underground fight club who recruits a humble Tai Chi student (played by Tiger Chen) to his closed-circuit battles. But when the young man is seduced by money and power, it will trigger a war between the Hong Kong police, the world's deadliest combatants and a peaceful spiritual discipline turned lethal new fighting style.

    Reeves' next movie is also heavy on martial arts: Universal Pictures' long-delayed "47 Ronin" is set for release in the U.S. and Canada on Dec. 25, 2013. The movie's U.K. release is on Dec. 26, 2013.
    Gene Ching
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  10. #85
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    Opens this Friday

    in select U.S. theaters only....

    There's a vid if you follow the link.
    October 29, 2013, 9:28 am
    Keanu Reeves Bowed to Chinese Censors to Make “Man of Tai Chi”
    By DAN LEVIN

    The movie ’““Man of Tai Chi” would seem like a perfect fit for the booming Chinese film market: a lowly courier with upwardly mobile ambitions gains wealth and renown by lethally leveraging his skills in the ancient meditative practice to vanquish a series of bloodthirsty rivals. Think “Kung Fu Panda” meets “Fight Club.” Then throw in Keanu Reeves, who often has taken the role of the stoic underdog hero, as both the kung fu-fighting villain — and the director. Taking several pages from classic martial arts films that made actors like Jackie Chan and Jet Li world famous and updating the concept for a modern world marked by an ascendant China, Mr. Reeves obtained funding for his directorial debut largely from the state-owned China Film Group. But even that financial backing was no match for the arch-enemies of film directors who covet mainland China as cinematic landscape and goldmine: Chinese government censors.

    In an interview on Canadian television that aired Monday night, Mr. Reeves acknowledged that his creative plans had been thwarted by the powerful forces that rule the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television. Notoriously tetchy about plot lines that might remind audiences of mainland China’s darker realities, the censors forced Mr. Reeves and his band of modern-day gladiators to take their mortal combat elsewhere.

    “They didn’t want underground fighting in mainland China, in the capital of China,” he said on the show, George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight. “So in Beijing there’s no underground fighting. And there’s no corrupt police officers.” Cue: audience laughter.

    To make the film, Mr. Reeves set those scenes in Hong Kong, the former British colony that has reverted to Chinese rule but that enjoys special autonomy and greater freedoms than on the mainland.

    The star of the Matrix trilogy is not the first director forced to bend his storyline to Chinese political will. The zombie apocalypse blockbuster “World War Z” gutted a central plot point of the original book — the undead infection begins in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan and spreads across the globe thanks to China’s illegal organ trade — instead vaguely attributing the outbreak to Taiwan, which the Chinese government considers a breakaway province.

    Last year’s remake of “Red Dawn” originally featured the Chinese Army invading the United States. But MGM chose to spend $1 million in post-production to turn the villains into North Koreans, rather than risk offending China and losing out on distribution deals.

    Working with China allowed Mr. Reeves to limit such fallout by cutting down on controversial content beforehand. “I had to take down some of the violence,” he said. “I had one sequence where the lead punched someone in the head 11 times, so we made it five.” In another scene, the fists flew 17 times instead of 32.

    Ever the optimist, Mr. Reeves spun the challenge of government meddling as a force for creative inspiration.

    “Now the film takes place in Beijing and Hong Kong and that opened up the world,” he said. “So for me that wasn’t, like, a bad experience.”

    Considering that “Man of Tai Chi” has underperformed at the Chinese box office since its release on the mainland in July, one hopes Mr. Reeves can harness that philosophical tranquility when the film opens in the United States on Nov. 1.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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  11. #86
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    Win MAN OF TAI CHI on BLU-RAY™

    Enter to win KungFuMagazine.com's MAN OF TAI CHI BLU-RAY™ Sweepstakes! Contest ends 6:00 p.m. PST on 12/26/13. Good luck everyone!
    Gene Ching
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  12. #87
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    Great Movie

    Keanu needs to learn how to use his legs to make stances Beyond that great movie.
    To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders.
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  13. #88
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    Our winners are announced!

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  14. #89
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lokhopkuen View Post
    Keanu needs to learn how to use his legs to make stances Beyond that great movie.
    Agree - in general Keanu Reeves' performance was the weakest aspect of this film. After the stellar fights that come before the final boss fight I just couldn't buy that this gawky clumsy green-belt-in-karate guy was a credible threat.
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