Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Watch Tai Chi Hero Movie Online No Survey

Watch Tai Chi Hero Movie Online No Survey


Lu Chan (Jayden Yuan) is still trying to find his place in Chen Village, the legendary town where everyone is a martial arts master...and Chen-style Tai Chi is forbidden to outsiders. But since he helped save the town from a frightening steam-powered machine, Yuniang (Angelababy), beautiful daughter of Grandmaster Chen (Tony Leung Ka-Fai), agrees to marry Lu Chan and bring him into the family. It's only a formality, though - she is the teacher, and he is the student - and that suits Lu Chan just fine, as the mutant horn on his head gives him incredible kung-fu power, but leaves him dumber each time, and closer to death. (c) Well Go USA
Release Date Tai Chi Hero Apr 26, 2013 Limited
Tai

Actors For Tai Chi Hero

Jayden Yuan,Angelababy,Tony Leung Ka Fai,Eddie Peng,Peter Stormare,Daniel Wu,Qi Shu,Eddie Peng Yu-Yen,Shao-feng Feng

Genres Tai Chi Hero : Art House & International,Action & Adventure

User Ranting Tai Chi Hero : 3.2
User Percentage For Tai Chi Hero : %
User Count Like for Tai Chi Hero : 340
All Critics Ranting For Tai Chi Hero : 5.1
All Critics Count For Tai Chi Hero : 9
All Critics Percentage For Tai Chi Hero : 33 %

Review For Tai Chi Hero

While Fung's attempts to err on the side of seriousness in this one after the stylized video-game high jinks of its predecessor are clearly purposeful, they don't necessarily make for a more pleasurable viewing experience.
Adam Nayman-Globe and Mail

There's less of the hyperventilated genre-pinging (video games, manga, comic books) from the first film. But there's still a nagging, cartoonish emptiness ...
Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times

"Tai Chi Hero" merely fills the eye, offering little that stays with you.
Andy Webster-New York Times

Purist fans of martial arts cinema probably won't embrace this film any more than its predecessor.
Bruce Demara-Toronto Star

This sequel is sluggish and rote where its predecessor was aggressively perky and desperate to please.
Simon Abrams-Village Voice

The second installment in a planned martial-arts trilogy mixes broad comedy and cartoonish action that will appeal to the genre's fans, though crossover potential seems limited.
Ethan Alter-Film Journal International

Tai Chi Hero is a kung fu mashup, sticking steam-powered airplanes made of Victorian-age gewgaws and metal gears into one of those martial arts films where people float through the air without benefit of any flying machines at all.
Jay Stone-Canada.com

Like its predecessor, Tai Chi Hero is continually hampered by its thin characters and badly convoluted narrative but at least this time there are more opportunities to savour the many oddball pleasures.
Jason Anderson-The Grid

Stephen Fung's pop-up graphics and jazzy fight scenes feel part of an unwieldy mix in which the director just throws whatever half-baked conceits up on the screen he feels like.
Andrew Schenker-Slant Magazine

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