Boyka Undisputed Movie
Boyka: Undisputed Trailer In the fourth installment of the fighting franchise, Boyka is shooting for the big leagues when an accidental death in the ring makes him question everything he stands for.
Boyka: Undisputed | |
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Directed by | Todor Chapkanov |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by | |
Story by | Boaz Davidson |
Starring |
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Music by | Steve Edwards |
Cinematography | Ivan Vatsov |
Edited by | Irit Raz |
Distributed by | Millennium Films |
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86 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Boyka: Undisputed[1] is a 2016 American martial arts film and is the sequel to the 2010 boxing film Undisputed III: Redemption. Scott Adkins reprises his role as Yuri Boyka. Tim Man, who choreographed the action for Adkins in Isaac Florentine's Ninja: Shadow of a Tear, serves as the film's fight choreographer.
On September 22, 2016 the film had a special distributor screening at Fantastic Fest to find a distribution company for the release. As result, Boyka: Undisputed was officially released on August 1, 2017 in US by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.
Plot
The film takes place several months after the events of the previous film. Martial artist Yuri Boyka is now a free man and has a manager named Kiril. He still fights in underground matches in Kiev, Ukraine. In a match, Yuri accidentally kills his opponent Viktor. He begins to regret this and thinks about what he is fighting for. He later discovers Viktor has a wife named Alma. Yuri tells Kiril to make a fake passport and goes to Russia to meet Alma.
In a town in Russia, Yuri finds out that Alma owes money to a crime boss named Zourab. Alma lives in a community center and she serves as a waitress in Zourab's underground fighting club. Zourab is now searching for a good martial artist to fight in his club. Yuri wants to help Alma pay her debt so he makes a deal with Zourab that he will fight for him in exchange for Alma's freedom. Zourab agrees and suggests Yuri to fight in three matches.
Alma invites Yuri to the training room in the community center for his training. Yuri easily defeats his opponent in the first match. He then must fight two brothers in the second match and defeats them by double knock out. In the community center, Yuri asks Alma why she does not leave the town. She replies she cannot leave the children, and without this center the children could become gangsters or bad guys.
In the third match, Yuri defeats Igor Kazmir, the elite henchman of Zourab. Yuri is about to leave, but Zourab forces Yuri to fight one more match to defeat his true champion, Yuri reluctantly agrees. Zourab bribes a high-ranking police officer to bring Koshmar to his club. Koshmar is a giant, furious and relentless martial artist. Zourab thinks Yuri cannot defeat Koshmar.
Scott Adkins
Because Koshmar has a large and strong body, at first Yuri cannot hurt him. After some intense moments, Yuri breaks one arm and one leg of Koshmar and finally kicks him out of the ring, knocking him unconscious. An angered Zourab takes Alma as a hostage and orders his henchmen to kill Yuri. However, Yuri kills all of Zourab's henchmen and chases after him. Yuri gets shot in his stomach, but he grabs Zourab, punches him in his face and chokes him to death. An injured Yuri asks Alma if she can forgive him for what he did to her husband and is arrested by the police shortly after.
Six months later, Alma visits Yuri in prison. She tells him she finally forgives him and he thanks her. Yuri continues fighting in the prison to pursue the title of most complete martial artist in the world.
Cast
- Scott Adkins as Yuri Boyka
- Teodora Duhovnikova as Alma
- Martyn Ford as Koshmar
- Brahim Achabbakhe as Igor Kazmir
- Emilien De Falco as Viktor
- Alon Aboutboul as Zourab
- Julian Vergov as Slava
- Valentin Ganev as Warden Markov
Production
Production began in late June 2015 in Bulgaria and completed production on July 31, 2015.
References
- ^With the editing of Boyka: Undisputed now complete... — Boyka: Undisputed (Official Facebook Page)
External links
- Boyka: Undisputed on IMDb
- Boyka: Undisputed at Rotten Tomatoes
- Boyka: Undisputed on Facebook
1. If you arrived at this franchise late, you would be forgiven for feeling a little lost. But if you have seen the others, this new instalment is surprisingly satisfying.
2. For newbies, the original 'Undisputed' (which starred A-listers) took an unexpected turn. Not uncommon for film franchises these days, later attempts to keep the franchise going involved smaller budgets and lesser-known stars. But here UNDISPUTED got lucky. A younger Scott Adkins found his ideal role in Yuri Boyka (much like Stallone found Rocky) and gave new life to UNDISPUTED in two back-to-back segments.
3. At that point, things get a little murky. For reasons that are not entirely clear to this reviewer, there was a long gap between the last instalment and this one. During that time, Adkins handlers gave him a series of odd B-movie parts, some of which (heavy sigh) were purely dramatic and had no fight sequences at all. The closest thing to a good MMA movie that Adkins did recently was NINJA SHADOW OF A TEAR. However, as the IMDb rating for that movie shows, it was still not in the class of UNDISPUTED.
4. AND HE'S BACK! Boy, nobody does Boyka like Adkins! Plus someone actually opened their wallets and spent some cash bringing this one to the screen. You have enough 'producers' in the credits to start a football squad. David White, who penned the last two Boykas (also the sloppier SHADOW OF A TEAR) had help in developing the story from Boaz Davidson, a writer with a few dozen action hits under his belt. Interestingly (!) Davidson worked with Stallone on the Expendables franchise. Director Todor Chapkanov is new to the franchise but acquits himself well as an action director.
5. The narrative backbone of the story is a bit soppy -- this one could have been subtitled 'Boyka Gets Religion' -- but thankfully it is used mainly as a plot device to keep the fight scenes coming.
6. There is a scene at the 40:00 minute mark where Boyka is training and another fighter tries to 'claim' his punching bag. It is a short sequence but memorable.
7. Also clever is the way the film ends with Boyka back in prison. For most characters that would be a negative. But, and you will see this if you watch the series in order, Boyka THRIVES in prison! Is there a Boyka 5 coming? We can only hope.
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Moreover the character of Boyka has been molded so wonderfully that you can feel the pain of the character when he tries to smile and feel his rage in silence.
Scott Adkins has done an a wonderful job and Boyka is a piece of art. The best part is this isn't just a Fight movie... Every now and then there, when you are unprepared and unguarded this movie hits you in such soft parts that you might tear up too.
Nobody ever thought that Undisputed would later create an antagonist named 'Boyka' who would be loved so much that his name would come before the name of the actual movie i.e UNDISPUTED.
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Now the plot is easy to follow. Boyka is back, commits an atrocity and needs to fix what he has done to redeem himself. That is all you need to know. The movie does have some heart during his redemption. A lot of flash, but also moments where you feel for Boyka and his journey.
I do not know the director's work prior to watching this, but he did a great job of filming action scenes. A lot of movies break the action up by changing the camera angles. This movie tones that down and lets you watch the action taking place.
I miss the days of real action movies. I will sound repetitive but this movie has lots of action, fights, fast moving plot and great choreography.
B-Movie or not, the movie is a 9.5. I am a fan of the Undisputed series. Scott Adkins is excellent and the bad guys are bad, and the good guys(Adkins) aren't perfect. The movie has heart and has a great pace. It's not slow, and is very entertaining throughout. One of the best modern fighting movies and dare I say the best fighting franchise if that is a genre. A must watch is my opinion.
Yuri Boyka Says Bring Me Your F#ing Champion.
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If you're not into fighting movies then this should obviously be a movie that you shouldn't be watching. For people who are, we generally don't mind the 'plot scaffolding' they throw around the movie as long as the fights are good and they are. My only slight complaint if you could call it that is that Boyka is a more remorseful character in this film and IMHO Adkin's kills the role more when he's just the badass who cares about nothing else excepting being 'the most complete fighter in the world.'
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But actually it almost becomes a comedy when the actors speak, i had some good laughs.
My expectations weren't high so i wasn't disappointed and enjoyed watching the movie.
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This installment, however has been BAMBOOZLED by the director, half the time I sat there thinking what the hell they were even doing. There's so much clutter, the villain is the most stereotypical geyser I have ever seen. And its hard to feel intense during the fight scenes because Boyka literally overcomes everything to the point of absurdity.
The point where I was probably most detached: After breaking his back in a 2 vs 1 and winning, he gets his back smashed in again by an undefeated fighter. He then gets up and easily wins, then RIGHT AWAY fights martyn ford (bane looking guy). Beats him, then THE TWIST HAPPENS!!!! The evil Russian rich guy doesn't follow up on his promise!! So two guys with baseball bats hit Yuri about 20 times, and he gets up and knocks them out. Then he takes a couple of bullets and kills the rich bad guy, and back to Ruskie jail for our boy.
So he breaks his arms and legs, gets beaten by baseball bats, gets shot a few times, and then keeps winning against all odds like nothing happened. At what point do you stop and wonder if Boyka is ever in actual danger? The 3rd movie did a really great job in this regard, by showing other fighters and actually being subtle in delivering emotion and conflict.
The ending was the worst part for me, all the other ones in the series were so satisfying. The whole point was to see Yuri go BIG and take on the best of the best, the movie teased you with his ambition since the start. Everything else was just a buildup to that, and right in the last few moments of the film, it ruins it. He goes back to jail, fighting and easily winning against random people. Wheres the satisfaction? where is the dream?
As for the main plot, its...not the best: Boyka unintentionally kills guy during qualifier fight for championship (his dream); feels bad and finds guy's wife to get her forgiveness; decides to repay her debt by fighting for a rich asshole; the rich asshole is a cheater but Boyka prevails and kills him; Boyka gets sent to jail; he gets the woman's forgiveness.
There was so much buildup to this movie, yet practically no resolution. I'm sure that my opinion isn't unique here, not even among fellow fans of the series. Maybe there will be a 5th one? I doubt it, but there is no closure here as it stands.
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The worst part was that Boyka went to prison at the end, which means be ready for Undisputed 5 of the same BS.
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I believe the director and a lot of other people involved in the other films where absent here, and it really shows. But let's talk about what made undisputed 2 and 3 good. For me, at first it's the dark gritty atmosphere and good characters. Boyka was a true product of his environment and the fight scenes where hard hitting with impact and (especially undisputed 2 which I think is the best) has an element of realism to it.
OK just to be clear, while I had realistic expectations for this; me and the woman was waiting ages and looking forward to it, only to be sat at the end both saying 'the other ones where much better' and here's why:
Boyka is too nice! I get that he's a changed man etc, but it's to the point it feels really artificial, and overly emphasized on God. Also, there is a lot more talking for him in this role and nothing against Scott Adkins but all you're reminded of is that his accent is all over the place, and that (even though he's clearly tried and fair play to him) but he's just not a very good actor. You didn't notice this in the other ones as he didn't speak that much or show/try to show any emotion. He looks good though, he's clearly beefed up for this role and had dedication to it but that's not enough.
SPOILER ALERT
OK fight scenes. Boyka pulls off some cool moves, the best fights are with the two brothers and guy with blonde line through his hair, the rest where 'meh' at best. The worst, OMG, the WORST thing they could have done was to bring Martyn Ford (the big steroid guy, who makes Scott Adkins look like Al Pacino in the acting sense) on board. The guy is just a big red steroid lump, who clearly can't fight or hit with any speed to save his life. And he has a bane/Hannibal style face mask on!!??!?! which is just laughable. Honestly me and the missus where in tears laughing every time he was on screen. Note to film makers, just because someone is big and may, in theory look cool, does NOT mean you should cast them in the movies, Arnold was a one off, remember that.
In summary (and not because they weren't in prison) it didn't feel in any way like an undisputed film, bad story, mediocre acting at best, OK fight scenes (some good) and some bad writing/directing makes this a flop and big disappointment which is a shame because I am a huge fan of the series. This could have been so much more, it really could, but unfortunately not enough elements where in tune with each other.
I do hope this isn't the last of the series, but if you do make another, do it properly otherwise it will be buried for good.
P.S
As of writing this, the review score is 8.4/10 on IMDb which is clearly fake, don't believe it the ratings will come down soon and more GENUINE people vote.
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I really don't like this film I love Scott Adkins and Undisputed 2 and 3 were the best films in my opinion. This movie to me fails haven't we see in other kickboxing movies in which a kickboxer takes another life and he mourns for it yes we did. I saw it in Bloodfist II, Desert Kickboxer and I think was also in Deadly Bet with Jeff Wincott.
So Boyka kills hiss opponent by accident and he feels remorse so he wants redemption again and he find's out the wife of his opponent is in debt with local mafia in Russia and he decides to fight to set her free.
Haven't I see that before the plot yes I did it was in Gladiator 1992 with James Marshall and Deadly Bet in 1991. In Gladiator James Marsahall's dad was owning a mob collectors a lot of money and Tommy (James Marshall) has to fight for money in the boxing ring to set him free. In deadly Bet Jeff Wincott is a gambler in Las Vegas after his last fight he loses his wife, respect and money and then he trains and goes against his opponent to set his wife free.
So yea this movie steals ideas and scenes from this movies he stole it from Bloodfist II, Desert Kickboxer, Gladiator (1992) and Deadly Bet. That is why I don't like it cause it is not original.
This movie has not the director Isaac Florentine in it from Undisputed II and III who were great absolutely amazing movies, this movie to me fails. Todor Chapkanov is the worst director and I really didn't care about Boyka and his self pitting retarded.
The villains were not likable like they were in the last two movies and Scott Adkins didn't you do the same thing when you killed a kickboxer in the tournament oh yes you did in Hard Target 2 why can't you be original?!
The only thing i liked in this movie is the good fighting scenes. The music score was terrible, the plot the actors everything fails flat. There was not any good music score in this movie at all like the last two good films had.
This movie to me is overrated trash and it is not good in my opinion.
Lionheart with Van Damme is much way better movie in my opinion than this crap!
Score F 1/10 I don't care about this movie I love 2 and 3 to death I don't like this one.
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Boyka Undisputed Movie Poster
I should have known better, but I got fooled once again by an IMDb rating that seems to be affected by people who have something to do with producing the movie, or haven't watched it themselves. There's no way a production like this should get the high ratings and positive reviews it does.
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With his conscience weighing on him, he makes a dangerous and illegal journey from the Ukraine to Russia to meet his now-deceased opponent's widow, Alma (Duhovnikova). He tries to tell her how sorry he is, and he attempts to give her his fight winnings, but it's tough going for them both. The sad part is, Alma needs the money. She's deeply in debt to local crime boss Zourab (Aboutboul) because she used his money to build a community center where all the children go. She can't escape because then she'd be letting the children down. She's slowly working off her debt to the unscrupulous baddie by waitressing at the club where, of course, there are fight tournaments.
Boyka approaches Zourab and offers to fight in the tournaments to pay down Alma's debt for her. All the while, the pressure is on because he has to get to Budapest for his big chance. But first he has to get past terrifying man-mountain Koshmar (Ford). Now that Boyka has found redemption with the Lord, will he find redemption with Alma?
With Undisputed IV, we have a bunch of winning elements that all come together. Firstly, and most importantly, we have the great Scott Adkins putting in a terrific performance as Boyka. There is perhaps no other actor working today that could have done what Adkins does here. He has a great Ukrainian accent, his fighting skills are in top form, and there's plenty of emotion as well. It's rare that one person can embody both the impressive physicality and the inner feelings Adkins does here. It's extremely well done. Then we have the other actors backing him up, who also put in fine performances, we have the plot, which allows for not just bone-crunching action but also the aforementioned emotion, and of course the fights themselves, which are very well-executed.
As far as the fights go, we can see all the moves and there isn't all that fast cutting that can be found in many DTV Punchfighters. With Adkins, that sort of stuff isn't needed - and, in fact, hinders what you can really see him do - and thankfully the filmmakers realized that this time around. A rather strange and unnecessary zoom effect is used in fight scenes and dialogue scenes alike, but it apparently isn't used to hide anything, instead it seems to be a stylistic choice. Besides not being needed, it marked this out as being a modern-day DTV vehicle, but it didn't hurt our eyes or anything.
Naturally, the word 'Boyka' is said countless times throughout the movie. We could be in triple digits here, but we weren't counting. Characters say it constantly, and crowds chant it repeatedly. It might be the most oft-said word on screen since Brakus. Or perhaps Malone. But, all kidding aside, Undisputed IV is a movie about redemption, and about how even if you've done unfortunate things in your past, you can always redeem yourself in the eyes of God or your fellow man. It's never too late. Even the name of Alma gives a clue - it means 'soul' in at least two languages, and Boyka himself gives alms to his church. This gives the film a certain depth and dimension that sets it apart from others of its ilk and it's not just a marathon session of meatheads punching each other.
However, if that's what you want, that is here as well. It's truly a movie of multiple facets. Could this be the best Boyka film yet? Please write in to give your opinion. But one thing is for sure: the character of Boyka - as expertly interpreted by Adkins - has become so beloved because he's a fighter with a heart, soul, and conscience. You feel his inner conflict between peace and violence. Somehow this speaks to us as action fans. We don't want to see anybody on-screen - or be ourselves - one-dimensional. He even has his name above the title this time, and that's no coincidence.
So, for a movie with a lot of brutal fighting - but also some depth backing it up - Boyka: Undisputed IV fits the bill perfectly.
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