My quick rating - 7.7/10. The Furious begins somewhere in Southeast Asia...at least that's what the text on the screen tells me. We meet a journalist investigating missing children who's on the phone with her partner because, apparently, she hasn't been home in a while. Instead of waiting for backup, she decides to investigate alone. You can probably guess how well that goes.
After a fantastic opening fight scene ends with her staring down an arrow, we cut to Wang Wei (Miao Xie), a mute handyman living a quiet life with his daughter, Rainy (Enyou Yang). If you've seen even one revenge flick, you already know where this is headed. Sure enough, Rainy is kidnapped, and since the police cannot do shit, Wei takes matters into his own hands.
His first lead takes him to, wait for it, a cage-fighting bar. LOL. Apparently, every criminal hangs out there waiting to be interrogated. At least Wei remembered his steel-toe boots this time. Since he can't speak, his version of questioning people mostly involves punching them until someone gives him an answer.
Also looking for answers is journalist Navin (Joe Taslim), whose wife has mysteriously disappeared (opening scene). Naturally, the two future allies have to beat the crap out of each other before realizing they're chasing the same bad guys. Action movie rules.
I wasn't as familiar with Miao Xie, but Joe Taslim has already proven himself in The Raid: Redemption and the recent Mortal Kombat II, so you know the fight scenes are going to deliver. Then they throw Yayan Ruhian into the mix as Tak, and now you've got two Raid veterans sharing the screen.
The whole movie has a dark and gritty look. Makes sense. It is about child trafficking. To describe the police chief as corrupt would be the understatement of the year. And once wealthy crime boss Paklung (Joey Iwanaga) completely loses his mind after his scheme begins to unravel, the body count ramps up in a hurry.
The action is where The Furious really shines. Bones break, bodies fly, and the choreography is excellent throughout. Rainy's motorcycle scene pushed things a little too far for me, but it's a minor complaint in an otherwise impressive action film.
Since we have two good guys, we get two final fights going on simultaneously. Having two fights of this caliber going on and mixing partners/opponents as it goes is worth the price of admission alone. Throw in another character looking for revenge, and it turns into an absolute martial arts showcase for a finale.

The Furious isn't trying to reinvent the revenge genre, but it doesn't need to. If you're looking for a brutal martial arts movie with fantastic choreography and enough broken bones to make an orthopedic surgeon rich, this one absolutely delivers.
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