Michael Scott
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Striking Rescue
Movie:
Video:
Audio:
Extras:
Final Score:
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Movie:

Video:

Audio:

Extras:

Final Score:

AV NIRVANA is member and reader-supported. When you purchase an item using our links, we might earn an affiliate commission.
Ahhh, Tony Jaa. In my early 20s he was THE rising action star of the new century, bringing his blend of TKD and Muay Thai to the silver screen in such hits as Ong Bak, The Protector and his attempts at making Ong Bak 2 and 3. He was an absolute BEAST of a martial artist, who brought Thai mythological culture along with their unique style of martial arts to action lovers everywhere. To this day I still think The Protector and Ong Bak are legendary films of that genre, and regularly show them off to action movie fans if they have never heard of him. Then the defalcation hit the rotary oscillator right around the time of Ong Bak 3. Tony was under a lot of stress trying to make his epic 2 part film sequel to Ong Bak, only to suffer a very public mental breakdown, as well as a bit of a spiritual awakening that had him retreat from filming for two months. Then, when filming was actually complete, he basically pulled a Dave Chappell, and left his super stardom behind to reflect and recenter himself. But when he came back to making movies, the world had sort of moved on. Sure, he’s had some success being added to other franchises, but Tony never reached the Jackie Chan heights that he did during his early years. But lately, Jaa has been steadily working over in China, pulling in hits such as the Detective Chinatown series, and even played in the sequel to Sha Po Lang (Kill Zone) a few years back. Now he’s back once more in a Chinese film, playing a Thailand native, living in Thailand, in a film that is half mandarin and half English. And of course beating the snot out of bad guys the entire time (kinda the whole reason we’re here).
Here Jaa is playing Bai An, an ex security specialist whose family is murdered by Chinese drug drug dealers in Jiati, Thailand. It seems that his wife was working for a high profile Chinese Businessman, and seemingly had evidence on his involvement in the drug trade, only for her and their child to be murdered in front of him. Now he’s out on patrol, looking for said businessman, and looking to enact his revenge. Stalking the daughter of said businessman, Tingting (Chen Duo-Yi), Bai An stumbles onto someone else looking to kidnap her. Turns out her father has more enemies than previously thought, and now Bai An and Tingting are trying to stay alive from Her father’s security forces, a rogue drug dealer looking extort the family, and possibly Bai An himself who still wants to punish daddy dearest for his wife’s murder.
That being said, I really do love that we’re seeing more films like Striking Rescue from both Jaa and China in general. Tony Jaa has slowly been building up his popularity over in China and Thailand over the last few years, and it’s nice to see him as a headliner once more. Also, seeing a Chinese film that isn’t overly jingoistic and political is a nice change of pace. I honestly could have been fooled into thinking this wasn’t a modern Mainland Chinese release except for the last 5 minutes of the film (won’t spoil it, but it’s definitely gives that “hoo-rah, yay for the police!” type vibe). The action is well done, with the only real complaint being the over use of CGI for bullet impacts instead of squibs (that is one thing I really wish we would go back to. Practical effects for bullet wounds and stunts).
Rating:
Unrated by the MPAA
Video:

Audio:

That aside, the tracks are both quite nice, with me giving the Mandarin/English hybrid mix the edge (sort of nostalgic to 1990s Hong Kong films with American actors and Chinese actors). Vocal clarity is well done, and the LFE channel certainly adds a ton of weight with all the fisticuffs. Surround channels come through nice and clear, with plenty of ambient action to fill things out quite nicely.
Extras:

• Well Go USA Previews
Final Score: 
At the end of the day, I had a good time with Striking Rescue. It’s really fun to see Jaa headline a film once more, and he still moves VERY well for being nearly 50 (I’ve been doing martial arts since I was 16, and I definitely have slowed down, and I’m only 43!). The action is fun, the dialog cheesy as all get out, but overall a fun Thai/China collaboration. The Blu-ray from Well Go USA looks and sounds great, but we have the typical anemic extras that should shock no one. Fun watch for sure if you’re a marital arts cinemaphile
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Tony Jaa, Chen Guo-Yi, Junjia Hong, Michael Mao, Bo Peng, Xing Yu
Directed by: Siyu Cheng
Written by: Guo Haiwen
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, Mandarin DTS-HD MA 2.0
Subtitles: English, French
Studio: Well Go USA
Rated: NR
Runtime: 107 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: May 13th, 2025
Recommendation: Entertaining Watch