Hydra

2019 [JAPANESE]

Action / Crime / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
713.57 MB
1280*534
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 17 min
P/S 1 / 2
1.43 GB
1920*800
Japanese 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 17 min
P/S 0 / 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by darthronk8 / 10

Surprising? Yes. Should it be? No.

Should I be surprised that an 80 minutes long foreign film has more depth, story, better acting, camerawork, and action than Black Widow? No. Was I? Yes. Let's stop feeding the fuel fire that is Disney and Hollywood. They're just making a quick buck.

This? This is cinema. I loved it.

Reviewed by tkdlifemagazine8 / 10

13h ago Hydra Is a Small Film That Packs a Big Punch

Hydra Is a Small Film That Packs a Big Punch. Hydra is a Japanese martial arts action action drama released by Well Go USA this week. The film marks Kensuke Sonomura's directorial debut and stars Masanori Mimoto as Takashi, the lead role. It is surprisingly good. After retiring as an assassin, Takashi leads a quiet life as a chef at a sushi bar, where he secretly watches over the daughter of a former associate. His peace is short-lived: soon, he is recruited for a final job that he simply can't refuse. Unlike some of the high profile martial arts action film releases of recent days, like Mortal Kombat, Hydra is not a sensational film saturated with special effects and "larger than life" action scenes. Hydra is a tightly compact, low key thriller whose characters are compelling. Mimoto is a character of few words; however, there is great depth to his performance and, as a viewer, you can't help but feel empathy for his pointless struggle to leave his violent past behind him. While this is an age old theme in the action genre, it resonates well in this film. While the film is well scripted and well acted, it is the martial arts direction and choreography that really stands out in this one. Kensuke Sonomura joins a growing list of action and stunt directors that have transitioned from second unit to the film's main Director. Like Jesse V. John and John Wick's, Chad Stahelski, Sonomura demonstrates that a martial arts action film can fully integrate a solid story with great fight and stunt choreography. This film does just that. Hydra is not just a movie with great fight choreography, it is a great movie. Like 2019's masterful Korean film, Revenger, Sonomura employs a gritty, realistic approach to the interesting, engaging, violent, and satisfying fight scenes in this film. The lack of "shaky-cam", the lack of high wire acrobatics, and the lack of sequences that look good on film but would never occur in a real fight combine to make some hypnotic and memorable fight sequences. It helps that Mansori Mimoto is a gifted martial artist with a subtle, but strong, screen presence. I look forward to more from Sonomura, and from Mimoto.

Reviewed by lotekguy-15 / 10

great action carries muddled story

When I saw the title, I thought we were in for another Marvel origin movie - this time about the evil organization the Agents of S. H. I. E. L. D. spend their lives fighting. Not the case. This one's a subtitled Japanese crime flick that's long on action and short on everything else. The fight scenes will justify the time for any martial arts junkies who remember to set the rest of their expectations on low.

First-time director Kensuke Sonomura, who also appears in a substantial role, has 75 stunt gigs under his (presumably) black belt. That history allowed him to choreograph a couple of the most exciting, unique fight scenes in the genre. No wires or CGI pyrotechnics. Just a couple of foes squaring off in gritty matches of speed and agility with normal-people weapons. These scenes are akin to the cherished chase scene in Steve McQueen's Bullitt - exciting for their atypically bare-bones staging.

The plot centers around a disenchanted hitman who has secretly dedicated himself to protecting the daughter of a deceased colleague. When trouble arises from some local gangs, it's time to get back in the saddle. The details matter little, and, frankly, could have used the hand of a skilled editor to bring them into a more cohesive narrative. As it plays out now, timelines, characters and motivations are rather muddled, isolating the fights as the main, if not only, attraction.

Stunt men can ripen into outstanding directors. Clint Eastwood and Hal Needham come quickly to mind in that regard. Sonomura might get there. He's still young. If he surrounds himself with skilled storytellers to balance his wealth of action knowledge, he could be a contendah.

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