Strong bloody violence and coarse language
| Director: | Gareth Evans |
| Actors: | Iko Uwais, Doni Alamsyah, Joe Taslim, Ananda George, Yayan Ruhian, Ray Sahetapy |
Deep in the heart of Jakarta's slums lies an impenetrable multi-level safe house for the world's most dangerous killers and gangsters. Until now, the rundown apartment block has been considered untouchable to even the bravest of police.
Cloaked under the cover of pre-dawn darkness, an elite swat team is tasked with raiding the safe house in order to take down the notorious drug lord that runs it. But when their cover is blown and news of their assault reaches the drug lord, all the building's exits are blocked. Stranded on the 6th floor with no way out, the unit must fight their way through the city's worst to survive...
| Status: | QuickPick |
|---|---|
| Run time: | 101mins |
| Origin: | INDONESIA |
| Aspect Ratio: | 16:9 |
| Run Time: | 101mins |
|---|---|
| File Size (Approx): | 0.9 GB |

You'll believe a man can die! Welsh-born, Indonesian-based director Gareth Evans has delivered one of the most stirring action films in eons with The Raid, a relentlessly brutal and endlessly enjoyable flick that never runs out of inventive ways to kill people. Searching for relative comparisons, Jackie Chan's Police Story, Neveldine and Taylor's Crank and all things John Woo immediately come to mind. But The Raid still feels like its own thing, and it's such an accessible crowd-pleaser (for adult-only crowds, of course), it might do for Indonesian cinema what Shiri and Oldboy did for South Korea, Ong-Bak did for Thailand, and what The Killer did for China. Prepare to welcome some astounding new talent to the world stage. Martial arts star Iko Uwais plays Rama, the last good cop in Jakart...
You'll believe a man can die! Welsh-born, Indonesian-based director Gareth Evans has delivered one of the most stirring action films in eons with The Raid, a relentlessly brutal and endlessly enjoyable flick that never runs out of inventive ways to kill people. Searching for relative comparisons, Jackie Chan's Police Story, Neveldine and Taylor's Crank and all things John Woo immediately come to mind. But The Raid still feels like its own thing, and it's such an accessible crowd-pleaser (for adult-only crowds, of course), it might do for Indonesian cinema what Shiri and Oldboy did for South Korea, Ong-Bak did for Thailand, and what The Killer did for China. Prepare to welcome some astounding new talent to the world stage.
Martial arts star Iko Uwais plays Rama, the last good cop in Jakarta. With a pregnant wife at home, and an estranged brother on the run, he has plenty of reason to want the streets of his home-town cleaned up. He'll start by striking Indonesia's black heart: a decrepit apartment block inhabited almost exclusively by drug-dealers, murderers, rapists, and machete-wielding gangsters - all of whom are outrageously skilled fighters. The worst of the worst, Tommy Wiseau-looking kingpin Tama (Ray Sahetapy) presides on the top floor, aided by violent sidekicks Mad Dog (Yayan Ruhian) and Andi (Doni Alamsyah). Though Rama infiltrates the building as a single cog in a well-oiled police team, order quickly disappears when the building's inhabitants fight back. Soon, it's a struggle for the police to get out alive. Rama, however, is intent on finishing what he started.
So begins a tornado of violence unlike anything we've seen before. Writer-director Evans is clearly of the 'video game' generation; not only does there seem to be an endless supply of enemies to act as bullet-fodder, but the very concept of rising 'up' through the levels and fighting various 'bosses' along the way is practically the essence of old-school gaming. Still, it's impossible to even note the episodic nature in which the film progresses amidst the unforgettable fight scenes (choreographed by Uwais and Ruhian). Each and every one acts as a reminder of how poorly action set-pieces are constructed in most major pictures.
There is enough meat on the (shattered) bone to make this a substantial treat beyond the experience of seeing people murdered so creatively. There's some commentary on the state of corruption in Jakarta, and more than a few parallels to The Departed (or, if you will, the Hong Kong original Infernal Affairs). Their inclusion is welcome. However, people are coming to The Raid for one thing and one thing only: bloodied, brain-breaking battle royales to the death between a series of increasingly talented martial artists. It delivers.
4/5