Martial
in sentence
543 examples of Martial in a sentence
Most of the fighters are really unfit and shabby people, and there aren't much that reminds me of true
martial
arts skills.
Forget Jackie Chan,Jet Li,Steven Seagal and Van Damme.The star of this movie,Gary Daniels is the best
martial
artist working in movies today.This London born action star always gives 110% in his fight scenes and is constantly improving as an actor as CITY OF FEAR shows.This tightly plotted little movie is no masterpiece and its lack of a decent budget is evident from time to time but nevertheless is a worthy entry in Gary's impressive filmography.
Set in Sofia,Bulgaria the action in this movie takes place in fresh locations and is enjoyable for every one of its 90 minutes;the supporting cast is nothing to write home about but you won't be watching them,you'll be watching Gary Daniels and if you consider yourself an afficionado of
martial
arts movies and don't recognise his name I suggest you hot foot it to your local video store and put matters right straight away.Soon you'll be saying:"Jackie Chan?
Rodman can't even pretend he knows
martial
arts, John Pinette's stunt double was more convincing than Rodman.
The plot is just any excuse for a bunch of over-the-top scenes of
martial
arts violence stolen from every bad 'B
' martial
arts film in existence.
The only exception being the bad 'B
' martial
arts films are 50 times more entertaining than this overblown garbage-fest.
If I was put in that situation and I knew
martial
arts I would use it too.
(The answer is
martial
arts scenes/action scenes, btw.).
The film looks like someone with a few dollars (not that many, actually) thought that other
martial
arts films are bad because they are violent, have actors with actual
martial
arts skills and don't star talentless kids and teens.
Compared to most other
martial
arts movies... it still sucks!
The scenes where he trains with the master of sword remind me all those hundreds of cheesy Rambo-Kickboxer movies where the white Americans kick the asses of their Asian adversaries in the field of the
martial
arts after having trained those arts for some 10 minutes.
This is one of my favourite
martial
arts action films.
And who casts
martial
artist Gary Daniels and doesn't give him a big fight scene?
This is one of those rare times when almost all of the great
martial
arts actors from the 70s are in the same flick.
Just like the previous ones, but this time they step it up a notch, by adding the incredible
martial
arts moves of that kung fu legend, Hulk Hogan.
Yes I knew the budget was tight and that there would not be so much money at hand, but seeing they could hire a
martial
Arts expert, for the fight scenes, makes you wonder why they didn't also spend money on a funnier script (w/o every cliché in the book)!
Like many Americans I was ignorant to everything except horribly dubbed
martial
arts films from the 1970s.
I have often found myself defending Albert Pyun for some of his films that few other people like (like "Nemesis"), but "Heatseeker", a pretentious mix of pseudo-sci-fi and
martial
arts action, really is one of his worst films.
It's badly dubbed, poorly edited, the plot is silly... but the
martial
arts, stunts and jokes are excellent and so it's as much fun as all those really old Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee movies.
Here, teaming up with Luc Besson & Robert Mark Kamen in the writing room, Li himself set about readdressing the balance for American produced
martial
artistry.
Ryuken talks of a school of
martial
arts named the Southern Cross, the flag of the Southern Cross is now the fearful symbol of a new order.
Mark Dacascos delivers the moves and his usual workman-like acting job in this utterly predictable
martial
arts revenge flick.
Almost no
martial
arts and what there was, appeared to be simulated by camera.
Why would one view a Steven Seagal movie other than for the
martial
arts?
The action (well that's when it gets around to it) is too little and unexciting
martial
arts... because we have to wait through long dry spells of talk.
That's simply not enough to make a
martial
arts movie.
Back in the late 1970s/early 1980s the
martial
arts genre nearly died due to a glut of cheap & substandard films.
With great
martial
arts/HK flicks like HERO & KUNG FU MASTER (the epic starring Donnie Yen) still without wide US distribution I am afraid this may already be happening.
The genre of the
martial
arts hero may be in a bit of a lull (unless you're a vampire), but a man of Mirko's considerable ability may just be able to revive it.
The action scenes are funnier as Rodman tries to look like he knows
martial
arts, but you just wonder how come he isn't getting beaten senseless by people who are obviously thousands of times better than him.
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