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Tony Jaa 2 in 1 - Ong Bak/Warrior King [DVD]

4.7 out of 5 stars 23 customer reviews

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  • Tony Jaa 2 in 1 - Ong Bak/Warrior King [DVD]
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  • Ong-Bak: The Beginning [DVD] [2010]
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Product details

  • Actors: Tony Jaa, Petchtai Wongkamlao, Pumwaree Yodkamol, Bongkoj Khongmalai, Wannakit Sirioput
  • Directors: Prachya Pinkaew
  • Producers: Prachya Pinkaew, Sukanya Vongsthapat
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: Thai
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Premier Asia
  • DVD Release Date: 9 Jun. 2008
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0016AJU6I
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 40,348 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

A boxed brace of films starring Thailand's martial arts king, Tony Jaa. As a youngster in rural Thailand, Jaa grew up on a steady diet of Jackie Chan, Bruce Lee and Jet Li but today he has become one of their number. At just 30 years of age, Jaa has already starred in a list of martial arts classics. In 'Ong Bak' (2003) the head of a village's sacred statue is stolen and young Ting (Tony Raa) is selected by the villagers to travel to Bangkok and rescue it. Raised by the monks of the temple, Ting was taught the ancient martial art of muay thai but forbidden to use it in combat. When Ting enters the seedy underbelly of Bangkok in search of the sacred relic, however, he's forced to unleash the martial arts beast and dispatch an endless parade of evil goons before his village is destroyed by drought. In 'Warrior King' (2005) the life of young martial arts master Kham (Jaa) is turned upside down when Australian criminals capture his two prize elephants and smuggle them to Sydney. Distraught that the animals, due to be presented to the revered King Of Thailand have been abducted, Kham is prompted to venture into a foreign land for the very first time. Rescuing the animals proves no mean feat. Despite the assistance of Sergeant Mark (Petchtai Wongkamlao), a Thai police officer based in Australia, and Pla (Bongkoj Khongmalai) a Thai girl sold into modern day slavery, Kham faces an incredible challenge.

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
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Getting both of these for a decent price, feels like robbery. They're both amazing films.

Hadn't seen any Thai films before. These have been suggested to fans of the martials arts genre, and rightly so.

It's a whole new style of martials arts for film fans. Aside from the occasional token display in one of those tournament films typically starring an uninspiring Van Damme, we ain't seen much of this style. And it really has enough to it to fill a movie without being repetitious.

The fight choreography is worthy of awards. Particularly in one scene, a very long scene done in one take.

Tony Jaa is a great performer. Gifted, and has enoug charisma you care enough to carry on watching him.

I never realised the importance of Elephants in Thai culture, but that's employed in the background of each film. One even being driven by their love for their tusked family members. Was still amusing when the lead burst into a room to shout "Where is my elephant?"

I'd recommend them to any fan of the martial arts genre.
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I love both movies, watched them in cinemas and on DVD several times and I am still in awe of the incredible action performance by Tony Jaa and all the stunt team.

However, when I finally bought this DVD, I was in for a surprise. A new soundtrack was added to Ong Bak. Gone are the weird but somehow loveable electronic vibes (most prominent during the Tuk Tuk race). Instead you now get a very generic Hollywood-ish orchestral soundtrack.

The DVD description does not inform about this. Therefore: minus one star for two 5-star movies.
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I've seen some of the negative comments people have made, and they are really off base, and quite frankly, stupid.

This movie is filled with incredible fight scenes, from the multitude of fights in the fighting circle, to that final fight in the cave. Most of the movie, in fact, was fight scenes, so I find it hard to believe that people think that there aren't any fight scenes in it. Those people who think that there aren't any action scenes in it are blind, obviously.

As another user has said, the whole point of Ong Bak was to display Tony Jaa's skill at martial arts, which is utterly incredible. Tony Jaa is the best martial artist I have had the pleasure of watching on the big screen.

While the plot wasn't the most original, why on earth did you go into Ong Bak expecting some sort of Oscar winning drama, such as Titanic? This movie was merely introducing Tony Jaa's skill to the North American audience.

People really need to lighten up. Just because a movie doesn't have an incredibly detailed and complex plot, that doesn't mean it's a bad movie! There is nothing wrong with a so-called "mindless" action movie, such as Ong-Bak! Just because it isn't some sort of drama, or another plot-saturated film, that doesn't mean it is garbage! While it may not have the best plot around, in terms of pure martial arts, this is the king. There is not a single martial arts movie out there that I have seen, that is more enjoyable than this movie, and I've seen a lot of martial arts movies.

If you are not stuck up, and you are able to enjoy a good martial arts movie, than Ong Bak is definitely for you! This movie is the best marital arts movie I have ever seen, and I gladly give it a 10/10.
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Ong Bak and Warrior King showcase one of the greatest martial art talents that has ever lived - Tony Jaa. The two films are set in Jaa's native Thailand and also showcase elements of Thai society especially traditional Thai values relating to community, religion, and nature. It has to be said that Tony Jaa is unbelievably good - he is very fast, exceptionally agile and athletic, and his fighting style fits into a world in which the viewer is much more familiar with what moves work in reality rather than in mysticism.

The premise of Ong Bak is the stealing of the local deity's head from Tony Jaa's village by a criminal working for a Bangkok based Burmese gang. Jaa as the most proficient of all the young men of his village must travel to the big city to retrieve the head and restore prosperity to his local community. On the way he finds many villains to fight and lots of people with values so different from his own that it offends him. On face value the plot is not that deep but what makes this plot work very well is that it is the classic tale of rural and traditional vs urban and modern set in a country where this very dichotomy has been tearing the nation apart over the past couple of years and it therefore is a fascinating insight.

Traditional Thai values of community and adherence to an ancient religious code are espoused but they are contrasted massively with the urban values of profit. This film does not shy away from the underbelly of Thai society negative perceptions of Thailand are explicitly referred to - not least by the character Big Bear who taunts Tony Jaa with commentary on Thai women and prostitution. Indeed, the prostition and drug taking that infest some of Bangkok's seedier parts are in full view during Ong Bak.
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