Ip Man: The Final Fight

2013
6.1| 1h40m| PG-13| en| More Info
Released: 20 September 2013 Released
Producted By: JCE Movies
Country: Hong Kong
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Ip Man reluctantly begins a series of challenges from rival kung fu schools and is soon drawn into the dark and dangerous world of the Triads.

Genre

Drama, Action

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Ip Man: The Final Fight (2013) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Herman Yau

Production Companies

JCE Movies

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Ip Man: The Final Fight Audience Reviews

PlatinumRead Just so...so bad
Spoonatects Am i the only one who thinks........Average?
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Cissy Évelyne It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
kosmasp Well it can't be said for sure, if it's the last one, but it does feel like a closure to a series that has spawned for movies altogether. While the first two remain the best (with zero being the weak link in that chain, though there are always worse movies as I like to say), this is a fine addition and nice round up.Not only do you have two fine (mature) actors opposite/side-to-side, you also have a story that is told. A story that tries to show us, that violence is not key. Don't worry though, there is plenty of great action scenes in it. It actually heightens those scenes, when you have something solid in between them, that makes you wait for them
KineticSeoul This is another exaggerated movie about Ip Man. This movie may seem more down to earth and realistic with it's direction. But it's boring and fictitious. If they were doing a fictitious movie about Ip Man at least make it entertaining. Although there is no doubt that Ip Man is a wing chun grandmaster. Still his main fame came from being Bruce Lee's master. Instead it tries to make it seem more down to earth and realistic, but will bore the crap out of audiences that want to see a kung-fu movie. They should have titled this, "A Era in Foshan" since it seems to focus on the people of Foshan over Ip Man. It focuses in on the harsh era where there isn't any civil rights and people are dying or being sold because there isn't enough food. This problem is still problem is still probably going on but it was worse back then. Ip Man in the previous movies is portrayed as having cool, charismatic, powerful(almost untouchable), and has calmness with flare attributes. In this it's more experience Ip Man that seems more human and is broken down, but it's just so boring to watch. It's cool to see a character that builds up and has hidden potential. Even with movies where the character doesn't have have hidden potential but works hard to build himself up. Or even a character that gets in touch with the hidden abilities and the environment changes the character. Or even the master showing his skills and crafts. But this movie is just so darn boring and depressing. I think the makers wanted to go in a "The Dark Knight Rises" direction but it falters in every way possible. Donnie Yen is the best Ip Man so far and this is the worst one in this franchise. This is not going to be the last Ip Man movie, but for a movie on his final fight. It doesn't end with a bang but a whimper. This is basically a drama with bunch of characters showing their stories and what they are going through. Which can be fine, but this one seem to lose it's focus on Ip Man. And focus in on irrelevant characters that doesn't even have enough development to even care for. This movie just didn't seem to blend the different genre styles in one movie very well. The camera-work is however good. The subtle and more quite direction could have worked for Ip Man's final fight but this isn't it. It tries to hit that peace and heart area, where it shows the turmoil and hardship and the aftermath but it didn't work. Audiences that want to see a character driven movie or a kung-fu movie will be left disappointed. Not a awful movie and it could have been worse. Oh yeah, also I thought Ip Man's wife in this was his daughter for few minutes.5.5/10
Y O This is just another a fantasy eastern movie. It is very disappointing and even if you give it a try, you will end up with a crappy cheap movie which is pure fiction and uses grandmaster yip man's name and disgraces him. The fighting scenes and the main story reminds of a soap. The techniques are not really WT. WT fights are not supposed to take more time as really needed. Most of the attacks are deadly and so if you don't wear some protecting gear, you will be dead within a minute or severely injured and need medical assistance. Beside that, you cannot see any martial art techniques in this movie which are in any way interesting. The actors have barely skills and that does not include WT in any way. One of the most important technique called 'chain punch' is just not available in this movie. The other Ip Man movies released before include that and are far beyond competition with this movie.
moviexclusive Is it too soon for yet another story based on the life of the legendary Wing Chun grandmaster? Well, seeing as how utterly disappointing Wong Kar Wai's version was, the answer is an empathetic yes. Here to revive hope that there is still much we have yet to see about Ip Man's life is Herman Yau's 'Ip Man: The Final Fight', a sequel of sorts to his much flashier predecessor 'Ip Man: The Legend is Born' that focuses on the character's middle to later years.Like Donnie Yen's 'Ip Man 2', this one begins in 1949 as Ip Man (Anthony Wong) arrives in Hong Kong from Foshan to settle into a humble room on the roof of a three-storey shophouse. Thanks to a chance encounter with martial arts enthusiast Leung Sheung (Timmy Hung, better known as son of Sammo Hung), Ip gains a small following of working-class individuals to start a makeshift Wing Chun school without needing to go against his nature to advertise his craft.It might seem like a motley crew – including a policeman (Jordan Chan), a seamstress and union activist (Jiang Luxia), a waitress at a dim-sum restaurant (Gillian Chung), a prison officer (Marvel Chow) and a tram driver – but there's no denying their passion to learn, and at least at the start, how close-knit a group they make. Yet the circumstances then don't make it any easier for Ip nor for his students, and it is from casting the fates of Ip and his disciples against a constantly evolving but always tumultuous Hong Kong in the 1950s to 1970s that Yau's film truly comes alive.Similarities to Alex Law's 'Echoes of the Rainbow' are not unjustified, since Yau clearly evokes the same sense of nostalgia for the period during which the former was also set. Expertly weaving several disparate themes, screenwriter Erica Li deftly paints a vivid picture of a colony rocked by tensions between the unions and their companies, infighting between the various martial arts schools, corruption of the local police and most importantly, the struggle of ordinary folk to make ends meet and provide for their family.Li draws on these real-life historical contexts to delineate the fates of Ip and his disciples, in particular that of Tang Sing (Chan) and Wong Tung (Chow). Among the disciples, Tang Sing's character is the most fully-fleshed, depicted as a good man caught in a moral crisis between following his conscience (as Ip advises) and the temptations of power and money in his position of authority. Tang's choice to side with the infamous kingpin named Dragon (Xiong Xin Xin) behind many of the illegal activities taking place inside the notorious Kowloon Walled City inevitably entwines Wong Tung, and by extension the entire Ip Man clan that culminates in the titular showdown.That finale is but one of four thrilling action setpieces, and easily the most gripping and exhilarating one. First within the confines of an illegal boxing ring in a warehouse and then along the exterior windswept alley battered by the onslaught of an imminent typhoon, action choreographers Li Chung Chi and Checkley Sin let the climactic fight between Ip Man and Dragon play out – the joy here not solely being from seeing veteran martial arts actor Xiong Xin Xin show off his impressive moves, but also from how Anthony Wong's one-year training in Wing Chun has truly paid off. Of course, that is also apparent from the earlier sequences, in particular one in which Ip Man squares off in a friendly closed-door bout with rival 'White Crane' master Ng Chun (comedian Eric Tsang in a fantastic cameo that shows off his agility quite certainly honed from his former days as a stuntman).Besides demonstrating a facet of Anthony Wong's acting repertoire that is rarely seen (fun fact – the man is a dedicated practitioner of the 'Monkey Fist' style), this portrayal of Ip Man also benefits from the dramatic skills of arguably one of the best actors in Hong Kong cinema today. While Tony Leung's was just like any other of his from other Wong Kar Wai collaborations and Donnie Yen's was probably more stagey than who Ip Man was in real life, Wong's depiction is – we dare say – the most nuanced that captures both the man's humble dispositions and his internal struggles.The latter is also thanks to a multi-layered script that doesn't just dwell on the aspects of Ip Man's life that pertain to his martial artistry, but also his personal life in relation to his wife Yong Cheng (Anita Yuen) and his son (Mainland actor Zhang Song Wen). The first Ip Man film so far to pay due attention to what must have been one of his greatest regrets spending the large part of his postwar years apart from wife and son, it just as poignantly reveals his gentle affection for a Shanghainese songstress Jenny (Zhou Chuchu) - despite the veiled objections of his students - that again finds closure in death. Wong is absolutely brilliant in these intimate moments of Ip Man's life, and it's hard to imagine a more befitting actor here to play the role.In choosing to illuminate the less ostentatious but more relatable characteristics of Ip Man's twilight years, Yau's film truly stands apart from the other four films that have come before it. Less concerned about the legend than the Man behind it, 'Ip Man: The Final Fight' is the most heartfelt one yet about him, with an assured and sensitive directorial hand from Yau guiding a well-written script and a terrific lead performance by Anthony Wong as well as fine supporting acts from Jordan Chan, Eric Tsang and Chuchu. Even though it doesn't have Donnie Yen's star power or the marquee names of Wong Kar Wai and Tony Leung, this is a beautiful film that offers a well-balanced perspective of Ip Man's later years against the rich backdrop of post-World War II Hong Kong