Tag Archives: martial-arts

Late Night Highlights: Stephen Colbert Does His Keith Olbermann Impression

Stephen Colbert tried his best to absorb Keith Olbermann’s essence Highlander -style on last night’s Colbert Report , but found that his body rejected it like a pompous kidney. Elsewhere, Conan O’B rien sympathized with the former MSNBC pundit, Cory Monteith talked crashing a school bus and Jon Stewart challenged his staff to a Nazi-themed scavenger hunt.

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Late Night Highlights: Stephen Colbert Does His Keith Olbermann Impression

Nikita’s Maggie Q Doesn’t ‘Give a Sh*t’ About La Femme Nikita

Maggie Q, the star of the CW’ s breakout action-drama Nikita , knows what she wants, and she’s happy to announce that she gets it. The 31-year-old martial arts cinema vet moved from Honololu, learned her craft from Jackie Chan, became a star in Hong Kong, and co-starred in various TV shows, miniseries, and films before hitting stateside fame with Mission: Impossible III , Deception , and Balls of Fury . Now, with 14 years of fight choreography under her belt, the Nikita topliner is torqued for the future of her series — especially because she has a specific vision of what the show should look, sound, and move like. It’s a vision she reiterates frequently.

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Nikita’s Maggie Q Doesn’t ‘Give a Sh*t’ About La Femme Nikita

Wong Kar Wai vs. Terrence Malick: Who’s Got the More Inscrutable Trailer?

Like a phoenix rising from the stagnant pre-New Year’s Eve cesspool of news, here comes the teaser for the new Wong Kar Wai martial arts film The Grandmasters , with Tony Leung kicking and punching his way through…what’s that? There’s no kicking or punching in the teaser? Oh. There’s almost no indication of what the film looks like, you say. That seems about right for today. But here at Movieline HQ, this teaser made us wonder: Is this one-minute blast of calligraphy really any less revealing than the unexplained imagery in the much-drooled-over Tree of Life trailer ?

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Wong Kar Wai vs. Terrence Malick: Who’s Got the More Inscrutable Trailer?

On DVD: A Trailblazing Western Comes Blasting Out of… China?

Winking and bopping and hip-swiveling from its opening credits to its last gasp, Kim Jee-won’s lo mein western The Good, the Bad, the Weird is an entrancing study in excess. As the camera swoops alongside through 1930s Manchuria to a hurtling locomotive about to be beset by multiple heists, you can just feel Quentin Tarantino’s zipper strain. It’s safe to say this is the first Chinese western (albeit a Korean film) — not a “Chinese western” as the wuxia pian martial arts epics are sometimes called, but a western with outlaws, hired guns, frontier trains, shoot-outs, desert towns and cowboy hats, as genre-genuine as Clint Eastwood’s poncho. Which, of course, is Italian.

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On DVD: A Trailblazing Western Comes Blasting Out of… China?

Super Set for Midnight Bow at TIFF

As befits its name, the Toronto Film Festival’s Midnight Madness program took to Twitter in the wee hours of Tuesday to announce a few additions to next month’s slate. Among them: The world premiere of Super , the James Gunn-directed, Rainn Wilson-starring comedy about a guy who adopts a superhero persona after his wife takes up with another man. Ellen Page co-stars as his “cute psychopath” sidekick; much wrench-swinging ensues. The Josh Hartnett fantasy/martial arts/Western/whatsit Bunraku is in as well. Developing… [ @mmadnesstiff via

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Super Set for Midnight Bow at TIFF

Joan Lin Feng Jiao Profile

Biography for Lin Feng-jiao Chinese name 林鳳嬌 Chinese name 林鳳嬌 (Traditional) Chinese name 林凤娇 (Simplified) Pinyin Lín Fèngjiāo (Mandarin) Ancestry Fujian, China Born 30 June 1953 (1953-06-30) (age 57) Taipei, Taiwan Occupation Actress Years active 1972–1982 Spouse(s) Jackie Chan (1982-present) Children Jaycee Chan (b. 1982) Joan Lin Feng-jiao (born 30 June 1953) is a retired Taiwanese actress and now the wife of martial arts film superstar Jackie Chan. She dropped out of school at age

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Joan Lin Feng Jiao Profile

‘The Last Airbender’: Worlds In Collision, By Kurt Loder

M. Night Shyamalan goes for a blockbuster. Noah Ringer in “The Last Airbender” Photo: Paramount Early reviews in the theatre-full of little kids I saw “The Last Airbender” with were enthusiastic: whoops and wows scattered throughout and a chorus of cheers at the end. The movie is filled with heroic feats, high-kicking martial arts, and elaborate digital imagery, and this is the audience it’s aimed at (along with — the filmmakers hope — an elder demographic that will be drawn in, too). Those unfamiliar with “Avatar: The Last Airbender,” the animated series that ran on Nickelodeon from 2005 to 2008, may find themselves straining to track the movie version’s live action. The fantasy world of the film is divided into four tribal nations, each devoted to one of the four elements: Earth, Air, Fire and Water. In each of these tribes there are specialized citizens called “benders,” who can manipulate the national element at will. And somewhere there’s an Avatar — a spiritual figure, reborn throughout time — who can control all four elements and generally keep the peace among the nations. But the last Avatar disappeared a hundred years ago, allowing the Fire Nation, led by the glowering Lord Ozai (Cliff Curtis), to embark on a campaign of world conquest. Ozai’s black-armored troops have already exterminated the benders of the Air Nation — all but one. Now the Fire Lord has dispatched his son, Prince Zuko (Dev Patel), to find that elusive individual: the last airbender. This turns out to be a 12-year-old boy in a purple cloak and a dusting of runic tattoos. His name is Aang (Noah Ringer), and he’s discovered on an ice floe one day by a waterbender named Katara (Nicola Peltz) and her brother Sokka (Jackson Rathbone). We soon learn that Aang is not only the last airbender, he’s also the long-sought Avatar. Where has he been for the last century? “I ran away from home,” he says. Aang and his new protectors spend the rest of the movie dodging Prince Zuko and a scheming Fire Nation commander named Zhao (Aasif Mandvi) amid great fire lashings and water whips and much taekwondo posing. There are massed digital ships, rampaging battle rhinos, a wise cave dragon, a six-legged sky beastie and a friendly flying fruit bat who goes by the name Momo. Among many, many other things. That’s a lot of story. And the movie is so packed (cast of 6000) and rushed and choppily edited that you soon give up trying to figure out what’s happening and just let it drag you along. The picture is crammed with big-budget CGI — it seems determined to command our interest through sheer technological will. But while some of the digital constructions are amazingly inventive, at the end we’re left feeling wrung-out, and wearily unamazed. Possible the most curious thing about this film is that it was written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan, a man once capable of such twisty delights as “The Sixth Sense” and “Unbreakable.” In the six years since the last of his movies with Disney, Shyamalan has become a wandering supplicant, touching down at Warner Bros. to make the very silly “Lady in the Water,” and then at Fox for the much-unloved “The Happening.” Now he has landed at Paramount, where he acknowledges that he’s taking a crack at launching a blockbuster franchise. “The Last Airbender” ends with the iron vow of a sequel. Will Shyamalan’s technoid determination be sufficient to keep that promise? Or will the search for a welcoming studio home have to continue? (“The Last Airbender” is a Paramount Pictures release. Paramount and MTV are both subsidiaries of Viacom.) Check out everything we’ve got on “The Last Airbender.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Last Airbender’ ‘The Last Airbender’ Clips Related Photos ‘The Last Airbender’

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‘The Last Airbender’: Worlds In Collision, By Kurt Loder

Penn & Teller: Bullshit! Season 8 Episode 3 – Martial Arts

Watch Penn & Teller: Bullshit! S8E3: Martial Arts The latest installment of Penn & Teller: Bullshit! is the TV show’s 3rd episode of the 8th season that aired last

‘The Karate Kid’ Filmmaker Talks Success, Sequel

‘It far exceeded my expectations,’ director Harald Zwart says of Jackie Chan/ Jaden Smith reboot’s box office performance. By Josh Wigler Jaden Smith in “The Karate Kid” Photo: Columbia Pictures Daniel LaRusso and Mr. Miyagi are nowhere to be found, but the “Karate Kid” franchise is most certainly back in business. The Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith-starring reboot arrived in theaters over the weekend and kicked its way to a first-place trophy worth $56 million, surpassing the movie’s production budget by more than $15 million. “It far exceeded my expectations,” director Harald Zwart told MTV News of the film’s success. “I’m from Scandinavia and we are in no habit of letting our dreams get the better half of us. We keep our feet on the ground and wait until we see the reality, and this time it just really exceeded what I had hoped for. It was just amazing!” Zwart caught the film in theaters opening weekend, watching it alongside complete strangers. Fortunately, these anonymous moviegoers seemed to love the martial arts adventure. “You get worried when you sit there at the premiere and go, ‘Oh, this is amazing. They love the movie.’ Obviously, they would,” the director said of his industry peers. “Going out to see it completely with an audience that you don’t know and they also cheer in the end, you know you’ve done something right,” he explained. “You live in a bubble as a filmmaker and no one can tell you the real truth, you just try to gauge it with tracking and everything. But until you’re in a random movie theater that’s packed … I tried to go into the 11:00 show and I couldn’t go! They were sold out! I was going to do the whole ‘I’m the director of the movie’ thing, but I figured they wouldn’t believe me.” With “The Karate Kid” having established itself as a box office hit, there’s already talk of a possible sequel. Zwart said that while another installment has been discussed, he and his team have only loosely tossed around the idea up until now — so as to avoid jinxing anything. “Every now and then we discussed it,” he said. “But the truth is, when you see Jackie and Jaden, they’re like a really good film couple. On and off camera, I was watching how they were pulling practical jokes on each other and throwing rocks in the lake, and you just want to keep looking at them because they have a great dynamic and great humor. We have just been playing with a few different ideas, but we haven’t landed on anything at the moment.” Zwart, speaking only for himself he said, would like to see another “Karate Kid” film explore an all-new story rather than follow in the cinematic footsteps of the ’84 flick’s two sequels. “I personally think it’s now so much on its own two feet, given the success, that it would be interesting to see where we could take it without ever thinking about the old ones.” And Zwart said he would love to be the one at the helm of a “Karate Kid” sequel. “If they think I’m appropriate for it,” Zwart added. “I think Sony has been fantastic for me. They’re the best studio to work for. They’re such a filmmaker-friendly studio. And [Will Smith’s production company] Overbrook, in my opinion, is by far the coolest company. So, yes, I would love to work with them again.” For now, the director is happy enough that his flick is resonating with moviegoers. “I’m just really happy that a really good film [was also] a success,” Zwart said. “It’s a movie where we decided to take our time to tell the story; we didn’t compromise. Both the studio and the production company gave me, the filmmaker, the support and freedom to do the movie that I believed was right.” Did you see “The Karate Kid”? Would you be excited for a sequel? Tell us in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Karate Kid” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos Jaden Smith In Will Smith’s Roles

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‘The Karate Kid’ Filmmaker Talks Success, Sequel

‘The Karate Kid’ Defeats ‘The A-Team’ At The Box Office

Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan’s kung fu flick gets the better of Bradley Cooper’s new action film. By Josh Wigler Jaden Smith in “Karate Kid” The Box-Office Top Five #1 “The Karate Kid” ($56 million) #2 “The A-Team” ($26 million) #3 “Shrek Forever After” ($15.8 million) #4 “Get Him to the Greek” ($10.1 million) #5 “Killers” ($8.2 million) After a few relatively quiet weekends at the box office, this past weekend made it quite clear that the summer movie season is officially in session with “The Karate Kid” debuting in first place over “The A-Team.” The “Karate Kid” reboot — which actually focuses on kung fu, despite the misleading title — stars Jaden Smith as an American youth who moves to China and comes under the tutelage of a martial arts expert played by Jackie Chan. The film exceeded expectations with an estimated $56 million opening weekend, a very impressive result given the movie’s $40 million production budget. It goes without saying that Sony Pictures will look to turn out several more sequels starring Smith and Chan. While the “Karate Kid” franchise enjoyed a successful new beginning, the same can’t be said for “The A-Team,” director Joe Carnahan’s updated take on the 1980s television series of the same name. Despite the star power of actors like Bradley Cooper and Jessica Biel and the promise of high-octane action sequences, the “A-Team” film adaptation only managed $26 million domestically and $15 million from foreign locations for a $41 million worldwide debut. It’s a poor performance considering the film’s reported $110 production budget, and it’s certainly a road bump in 20th Century Fox’s plan to turn “The A-Team” into a new tent-pole action franchise. The remainder of the box-office top five performed as expected, with “Shrek Forever After” continuing its impressive staying power with a $15.8 million third-place finish. Last weekend’s “Get Him to the Greek” and “Killers” landed in fourth and fifth place with $10.1 million and $8.2 million, respectively. Upcoming Releases The toys are back in town next weekend as “Toy Story 3” hits movie theaters nationwide alongside comic book adaptation “Jonah Hex.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Karate Kid” and “The A-Team.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Get Him To The Greek’ MTV Rough Cut: ‘A-Team’ Related Photos ‘Karate Kid’ Premieres In Los Angeles ‘A-Team’ Brings Tanks, Helicopters To L.A. Premiere “The A-Team” Official Stills Russell Brand And Katy Perry At The ‘Get Him To The Greek’ L.A. Premiere ‘Get Him To The Greek’

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‘The Karate Kid’ Defeats ‘The A-Team’ At The Box Office