Your Company
 

Kill Zone 2(殺破狼2)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

China, Hong Kong · 2015
2h 0m
Director Soi Cheang
Starring Tony Jaa, Wu Jing, Simon Yam, Zhang Jin
Genre Action, Crime, Thriller

Kit is a hard-boiled cop who is sent to jail in Thailand after his attempt to bust a drug dealer named Hung goes wrong. In prison, Kit uncovers an organ trafficking ring, and tries to stay alive while the warden continually attempts to kill him, helped by a prison guard hoping for a bone marrow transplant for his daughter.

Stream Kill Zone 2

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

91

The Film Stage by

Stylistically free but still cleanly delineated in character and crime-film structure, there comes a clear direction for the 21st-century action film.

60

Village Voice by Aaron Hillis

Dizzily entertaining when the knives, bullets, and feet are flying, and sometimes painfully melodramatic during the interim exposition.

70

The New York Times by Andy Webster

If there’s one rewarding thing about many Hong Kong action directors, it’s that they rarely dawdle in getting to what fight fans have come for: bracing shootouts and high-impact fisticuffs and footwork.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Elizabeth Kerr

Far from being the convoluted mess it could have been, incoming director Cheang Pou-soi (Yip serves as a producer) crafts a tight, swiftly paced action yarn that ensures viewers won’t be pining for the presence of the first film’s stars, Donnie Yen and Sammo Hung.

70

Screen International by James Marsh

A sequel in name only to Wilson Yip’s 2005 film, Soi Cheang’s SPL2: A Time For Consequences nevertheless recaptures the exhilarating energy of the original.

70

Variety by Joe Leydon

Helmer Cheang and action director Li Chung Chi offer an impressive array of rock-’em-sock-’em setpieces — including a battle royale at a cruise ship terminal, and grand finale in a Hong Kong high-rise — and the performances, especially those by Wu, Koo and Zhang, are thoroughly attuned to the movie’s overall tone of fever-pitched martial-arts noir melodrama.

70

Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray

Mostly, just as “SPL” did with Yen, this sequel serves as an ideal showcase for talented martial artists. Kill Zone 2 watches with awe as Jaa and Wu move with balletic force. There’s grace within their violence.

88

RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams

Don't let the tacky American-friendly title of Kill Zone 2 fool you: the martial arts genre's next big thing is here, and it is way meaner, more technically accomplished, and more exciting than its disappointing marketing strategy implies.

Users who liked this film also liked