Movie Where Kid Goes Back in Time to Learn Martial Arts

2015 American pic

The Martial Arts Kid
The Martial Arts Kid poster.jpg
Directed by Michael Baumgarten
Written by
  • Michael Baumgarten
  • Adam W. Marsh
Produced by
  • James E. Wilson
  • Cheryl Wheeler-Duncan
Starring
  • Don "The Dragon" Wilson
  • Cynthia Rothrock
  • Jansen Panettiere
  • Matthew Ziff
  • Kathryn Newton
  • T. J. Tempest
Cinematography Robert Hayes
Edited by Phil Norden
Music past Kazimir Boyle

Product
company

Traditionz Amusement

Release date

  • September 18, 2015 (2015-09-18)

Running time

102 minutes
Land The states

The Martial Arts Child is a 2015 martial arts film directed by Michael Baumgarten and starring Don "The Dragon" Wilson and Cynthia Rothrock as a couple who take in their nephew Jansen Panettiere, and teach him martial arts when he is bullied. Nearly of the supporting cast of the film are bodily martial artists, some of whom announced equally themselves in the movie.

Plot [edit]

Robbie Oakes is a Cleveland loftier schooler who afterwards losing his mother, finds himself constantly in trouble with the police force. When his grandmother has had enough after his latest arrest, Robbie is sent to Cocoa Beach, Florida to live with his aunt Cindy and uncle Glen. The night of his arrival, Robbie sneaks out of the house and goes to a local convenience shop. At that place, he sees a immature girl, Rina, sitting in a auto. When he talks to her, Rina's fellow Bo harasses and punches Robbie in the confront.

The next day at school, Robbie finds himself again harassed and embarrassed past Bo, who pushes him into the girls' restroom. At tiffin, Robbie meets his first friend, Lenny, who sees the blackness center and suggests that Robbie should learn self-defense force or it will be the longest two months of his life. When Cindy invites him to lunch at her local eatery, they are confronted by a thug. When Robbie confronts the thug verbally, the thug pulls out a pocketknife. Cindy takes on the thug and uses martial arts to end him. The police make it and Robbie, in a state of shock, asks Cindy where she learned martial arts.

The following 24-hour interval, Robbie goes to the Infinite Declension Dojo, which is run by Glen. Robbie asks Glen to teach him martial arts and at outset Glen refuses just and so asks why. Robbie tells Glen that he is tired of being the person he has become and wants to exercise something about it. Glen takes Robbie in as a student and Robbie begins to change slowly. When Glen takes Robbie to a local bike store to buy ane for Robbie, Glen takes on a bully harassing the bike shop possessor, who turns out to be Rina's male parent.

On his kickoff bike ride, Robbie finds another local schoolhouse, Dojo Farthermost. At that place, he meets Autobus Laurent Kaine, who dissimilar Glen believes that martial arts are for winning and destroying opponents. Robbie besides learns that Bo is a student of Kaine'south and leaves. Robbie continues his training with Glen and Cindy and begins to slowly change his means. He becomes more friendly and begins to respect Glen and Cindy as if they were his real parents. Robbie even gets a job at the cycle shop under the condition that he can attempt to steal Rina away from Bo. When Bo finds Robbie one day, he starts his verbal attack on Robbie merely this time, Robbie doesn't budge. Glen, worried something dangerous happens, goes to Dojo Farthermost to talk to Kaine. Kaine and Glen used to be friends, but their opposing views of martial arts take them rivals. When Kaine learns that Bo was the one who has been bullying Robbie, he tells Glen at that place's not much he tin do because Bo'due south father has a lot of pull in boondocks.

At a Halloween party, Robbie finally admits his feelings for Rina, who has been stood up by Bo so he tin can get off with his friends. The next day at the Space Declension Dojo, Rina finally reciprocates her feelings towards Robbie and the two become a couple, much to the chagrin of Bo. Meanwhile, Lenny is harassed past a trio of goons at the beach only to be rescued by Cindy. Cindy takes Lenny to the dojo and asks Robbie to teach him martial arts. When Robbie tells Lenny that martial arts is about protecting himself and others, Lenny agrees. Meanwhile, at Dojo Extreme, Kaine's obsession with his style forces his girlfriend Nika, to get upset and attempts to use a newcomer at the gym, Derek, to confront Kaine. When Kaine uses his "appraise, assert, and amputate" method, he breaks Derek's leg and apologizes to Nika.

When Rina calls Robbie and tells him that Bo has found her and has hurt her, Robbie flies into a rampage. He finds a agglomeration of Bo's friends to demand where he is and when they try to fight him, Robbie gets the upper mitt. At a local pizza parlor, someone makes a viral video of Robbie fighting more of the Dojo Extreme squad and it is uploaded for anybody to see. Robbie heads to Dojo Extreme and finds himself outnumbered by Kaine, Bo, and the rest of the dojo. However, Dojo Farthermost learns that Robbie didn't come alone. Glen, Cindy, Lenny, and members of the Infinite Coast Dojo arrive. Robbie and Bo fight inside of a cage while the 2 schools go at information technology. When one of Dojo Extreme'south members pulls out a gun, Cindy stops him in time and declares the rumble over. Glen follows Kaine to a baseball muzzle, where the two begin to fight. Meanwhile, Robbie finally defeats Bo using a grappling motility. He celebrates his victory with a backflip and a loud 'kiai'. Meanwhile, Glen and Kaine fight in the cage with baseballs flying at them and then with baseball bats. Glen finally knocks Laurent down and tells him information technology is over. Kaine soon realizes that everyone does accept something to learn.

2 weeks after, Glen, Cindy, Katie (Glen and Cindy'southward daughter), Robbie, Rina, and Lenny are at the beach when they are being watched. The man watching them from afar is Frank Whitlaw, Bo's father, who vows to get even with the Space Coast Dojo.

Cast [edit]

  • Don "The Dragon" Wilson every bit Glen
  • Cynthia Rothrock as Cindy
  • Jansen Panettiere equally Robbie Oakes
  • Matthew Ziff as Bo Whitlaw
  • Kathryn Newton equally Rina
  • Brandon Tyler Russell as Lenny
  • Kayley Stallings as Katie
  • T. J. Storm as Omnibus Laurent Kaine
  • Natasha Blasick every bit Nika
  • Inga Van Ardenn as Inga
  • Lorraine Ziff as Peggy
  • Jody Nolan equally Raymond
  • Sydney Sweeney every bit Julie
  • Nassim Lahrizi as Hazma
  • Jesse-Jane McParland as Space Declension Dojo Pupil
  • Chuck Zito equally Frank Whitlaw
  • Billy R. Smith as Derek
  • R. Marcos Taylor as Bike Shop Bully
  • James R. Wilson equally Onlooker In Cincinnati
  • Cheryl Wheeler as Onlooker In Cincinnati
  • Danny Pardo as Officeholder Vega

Production [edit]

The film was adult by James Wilson, the blood brother of lead player Don "The Dragon" Wilson, as a modern-day version of The Karate Kid. When the motion-picture show was announced, the filmmakers started a Kickstarter fund,[ane] in which they exceeded their target goal with $173,486 from 430 backers.

An open casting call was washed in April in which there were over 250 people who showed up.[two] Production began on the weekend of June seven, 2014 in Cocoa Embankment, Florida[three] and Melbourne, Florida, for six days followed past eight days in Los Angeles, California.

To bring the spirit of martial arts in the film, many well-known martial artists, aside from Wilson, Rothrock, Ziff, and Tempest, appear in the motion-picture show in cameos either instructors or themselves. They include Olando Rivera, Christine Bannon-Rodrigues, Jeff W. Smith, Glenn C. Wilson, Carl Van Meter, and Dewey Cooper.

Reception [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has 3 negative reviews.[four]

Martin Tsai of The Los Angeles Times writes: So we have one minority pitted confronting the other minority in a bid to bear witness which is worthier of inclusion, while the bad guy who started the fight, Bo, is white.[5]

Monica Castillo of The Village Voice writes: Karate Child homage offers decent messages, and so-then story.[six]

Sandie Angulo Chen of Common Sense Media writes: For a motion-picture show starring and then many activeness stars and fighting champs, The Martial Arts Child falls surprisingly curt of winning any medals.[7]

Awards [edit]

The movie won the Best Florida Film at the Sunscreen Film Festival in St. Petersburg, Florida. Actor Matthew Ziff won the Best Supporting Actor award at the same festival for his role of groovy Bo Whitlaw. The flick won three awards at the Melbourne Independent Filmmakers Festival including Best Dramatic Characteristic, Best Music Score, and the Humanitarian Honour.

The movie also received the highest rating from The Dove Foundation, giving the film 5 out of 5 Doves for "Family Approved Film".

Release [edit]

After multiple screenings all over the The states, the DVD and Blu-Ray were released via the movie's official website on April 14, 2016.

Sequel [edit]

First announced on a featurette on the DVD of the original film, Cynthia Rothrock took to Facebook to denote that pre-production has begun on the sequel, which is to be called The Martial Arts Kid ii: Payback. Don Wilson and Cynthia Rothrock are returning in their roles of Glen and Cindy and Michael Baumgarten is returning to write and direct the sequel. James East. Wilson is returning as producer as well. [8]

An IndieGogo promotion was announced to raise funds for the film on Jan 15, 2018. Aside from Wilson and Rothrock, original cast members T. J. Tempest, Matthew Ziff, Brandon Tyler Russell, and Chuck Zito are returning and new cast members announced include Sasha Mitchell, Anita Dirt, Benny Urquidez, and Bill "Superfoot" Wallace.[9]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "The Martial Arts Kid". Kickstarter.
  2. ^ "More than than 250 people show upward for". Florida Today. 11 Apr 2014.
  3. ^ Martial Arts Entertainment (3 June 2014). "The Martial Arts Kid Movie gets a leg up in Cocoa Embankment". Martial Arts Entertainment.
  4. ^ "The Martial Arts Kid". Rotten Tomatoes. 18 September 2015.
  5. ^ "Review: 'Martial Arts Kid' mixes up MMA and racial profiling". Los Angeles Times. 17 September 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-09-20.
  6. ^ "Eighties Throwback 'The Martial Arts Kid' Can't Quite Sweep the Leg of Greatness". 15 September 2015.
  7. ^ "The Martial Arts Kid - Movie Review". 20 September 2015.
  8. ^ "Start Production Meeting for The Martial Arts Kid ii". Facebook. v Oct 2016.
  9. ^ "IndieGoGo: The Martial Arts Kid 2: Payback". 15 Jan 2018.

External links [edit]

  • The Martial Arts Child at IMDb
  • Official Website

moosesearpon.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Martial_Arts_Kid

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