One of the greatest car chases in action cinema—on three-wheeled tuk-tuks. No CGI, just insane driving, real crashes, and Jaa sliding under trucks. It’s breathless and hilarious.
Broken glass, real fire, concrete floors. When someone hits a wall, the wall cracks. When Ting does a backflip over a car, you see the landing shudder. This is anti-CGI cinema. The Not-So-Good: Honest Flaws 1. Thin Plot and Characterization Let’s be blunt: the story is a 1980s Hong Kong template . Village boy goes to city → corrupt bad guys → tournament fight. Ting is stoic to a fault (he barely speaks 50 lines). His sidekicks—the comic-relief George (Petchtai Wongkamlao) and the love interest Muay Lek—exist only to get into trouble. No character arc, no subtext. ong bak full
Jaa’s signature move—running across people’s shoulders—is amazing the first time. By the fifth time (the market, the tunnel, the warehouse), it loses impact. A little more variety in escapes would help. One of the greatest car chases in action