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Boyka: Undisputed | |
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Directed by | Todor Chapkanov |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by | |
Story by | Boaz Davidson |
Starring |
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Music by | Steve Edwards |
Cinematography | Ivan Vatsov |
Edited by | Irit Raz |
Distributed by | Millennium Films |
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86 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Boyka: Undisputed[1] is a 2016 American martial arts film and is the sequel to the 2010 boxing film Undisputed III: Redemption. Scott Adkins reprises his role as Yuri Boyka. Tim Man, who choreographed the action for Adkins in Isaac Florentine's Ninja: Shadow of a Tear, serves as the film's fight choreographer.
On September 22, 2016 the film had a special distributor screening at Fantastic Fest to find a distribution company for the release. As result, Boyka: Undisputed was officially released on August 1, 2017 in US by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.
The film takes place several months after the events of the previous film. Martial artist Yuri Boyka is now a free man and has a manager named Kiril. Adobe after effects cc download. He still fights in underground matches in Kiev, Ukraine. In a match, Yuri accidentally kills his opponent Viktor. He begins to regret this and thinks about what he is fighting for. He later discovers Viktor has a wife named Alma. Yuri tells Kiril to make a fake passport and goes to Russia to meet Alma.
In a town in Russia, Yuri finds out that Alma owes money to a crime boss named Zourab. Alma lives in a community center and she serves as a waitress in Zourab's underground fighting club. Zourab is now searching for a good martial artist to fight in his club. Yuri wants to help Alma pay her debt so he makes a deal with Zourab that he will fight for him in exchange for Alma's freedom. Zourab agrees and suggests Yuri to fight in three matches.
Alma invites Yuri to the training room in the community center for his training. Yuri easily defeats his opponent in the first match. He then must fight two brothers in the second match and defeats them by double knock out. In the community center, Yuri asks Alma why she does not leave the town. She replies she cannot leave the children, and without this center the children could become gangsters or bad guys.
In the third match, Yuri defeats Igor Kazmir, the elite henchman of Zourab. Yuri is about to leave, but Zourab forces Yuri to fight one more match to defeat his true champion, Yuri reluctantly agrees. Zourab bribes a high-ranking police officer to bring Koshmar to his club. Koshmar is a giant, furious and relentless martial artist. Zourab thinks Yuri cannot defeat Koshmar.
Because Koshmar has a large and strong body, at first Yuri cannot hurt him. After some intense moments, Yuri breaks one arm and one leg of Koshmar and finally kicks him out of the ring, knocking him unconscious. An angered Zourab takes Alma as a hostage and orders his henchmen to kill Yuri. However, Yuri kills all of Zourab's henchmen and chases after him. Yuri gets shot in his stomach, but he grabs Zourab, punches him in his face and chokes him to death. An injured Yuri asks Alma if she can forgive him for what he did to her husband and is arrested by the police shortly after.
Six months later, Alma visits Yuri in prison. She tells him she finally forgives him and he thanks her. Yuri continues fighting in the prison to pursue the title of most complete martial artist in the world.
Production began in late June 2015 in Bulgaria and completed production on July 31, 2015.
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Six years is a long time to wait, but at last, The Most Complete Fighter in the World is back for another heart-stopping, pulse-pounding MMA smackdown in “Boyka: Undisputed”, and if there’s one thing every action fan can agree on, it’s that a world without Boyka just isn’t worth living in! Rarely has the question “Was it worth the wait?” been more of the rhetorical variety than when applied to the latest chapter of the “Undisputed” saga. Scott Adkins steps back into his signature role for the third time where the fights are fiercer, the hits harder and the stunts more spectacular, and no doubt to the delight of Bruce Lee, the content is more emotional!
The ever-incredible Scott Adkins once again returns to the role of The Most Complete Fighter in the World, Yuri Boyka and once he steps back into the ring, his is a title that’s certainly hard to dispute. Teodora Duhovnikova portrays Alma, a young woman who becomes the object of Boyka’s protection after a tragedy in the ring befalls her husband Viktor, played by Emilien De Falco. Alma’s menace comes in the form of Russian mob boss Zourab, played by Alon Moni Aboutboul who brings with him an assortment of nefarious henchmen for Boyka to overcome, including his right-hand man Igor Kazmir, played by Brahim Achabbakhe, as well as Boyka’s most challenging foe yet, the hulking behemoth Koshmar, played by the 325lb British bodybuilder, Martyn Ford.
Since his escape from prison, Yuri Boyka continues to compete in underground fights in Ukraine and is finally on the verge of making it to the big leagues of the MMA world when he receives an offer to compete in a qualifying match that, should he win, will grant him entry into a major upcoming MMA tournament. Boyka wins the fight, but the thrill of his victory is short-lived when he learns that his opponent later died from the pummeling he delivered.
Boyka heads to Russia to seek the forgiveness of the fighter’s widow Alma and soon learns that her husband’s death has condemned her to a life of indentured servitude to local crime boss Zourab, due to the loan her husband took from him to establish a local community centre. Although knowing that he risks being sent back to prison by staying in Russia, Boyka offers to compete in a series of fights for Zourab in order to pay off Alma’s debt.
It goes without saying that Scott Adkins can play Boyka in his sleep, but neither he nor the “Undisputed” series have ever been content to rest on their laurels and it shows in what is the undisputed (last time, I promise!) best written film in the franchise. This is truly Boyka like you’ve never seen him before.
Once the hissing, bloodthirsty villain of “Undisputed 2”, he not only becomes the title character of the fourth installment (or third, depending on whether or not you’ve seen the largely overlooked first film) but transitions into something almost resembling a Christ-like figure in just how much he is prepared to sacrifice for the widow of a man who died by his fists. Yeah, about that fight with Viktor – the “Undisputed” series is still delivering in the upper one-percentile of martial arts actionbut the team behind “Boyka: Undisputed” clearly want the audience to feel the impact of this out-of this-world match-up as the lynch pin on which the entire film hinges.
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Under the direction of series newcomer Todor Chapkanov (taking the reins from the series’ usual auteur Isaac Florentine who returns here as producer), Scott and Emilien De Falco pull out every last stop and utilize practically every kicking combination imaginable for this fight, easily the most brutal of the film and perhaps of the entire series – no small feat in a film franchise where crippling leg injuries are par for the course. Rest assured, you WILL be experiencing whiplash after Boyka delivers an absolutely crushing finishing strike on his doomed opponent!
Of course, the title of The Most Complete Fighter in the World means nothing if the holder cannot be challenged and in this regard, “Boyka: Undisputed” is thinking five steps ahead. One of the strengths of “Undisputed 3” was Boyka having to work around the knee injury he was saddled with at the end of “Undisputed 2”. The fourth film establishes that Boyka’s largely overcome this problem after having his knee surgically repaired but he faces a whole new challenge after taking a kick in the back during a two-on-one fight and that’s just one of the ways the film tests him to his limits, but then, Boyka’s always liked to live dangerously!
Where other martial arts films occasionally fall into the trap of failing to give a distinct gimmick or trait to each duel, every successive fight that Boyka takes on to free Alma from Zourab’s clutches comes with its own unique challenge and identity. Everyone will have their personal favourite, but the two-on-one match is certainly a show-stopper (the fact that the lightning fast, veteran stunt man and fight choreographer Tim Man portrays one of Boyka’s foes here probably has something to do with that) and in his subsequent match with Igor Kazmir, Scott pulls out just about the most incredible variant of the Guyver Kick you’ll ever see.
In discussing the film’s finale, I must be extremely blunt – you do not want the last twenty minutes of this film spoiled for you. Obviously, it goes without saying that Boyka’s final duel with the hulking, face-caged psychopath Koshmar is incredible to a ridiculous degree, but it’s the events that come before and after that make what’s happening in the ring something that leaves you on the edge of your seat, genuinely asking how The Most Complete Fighter in the World is going to get out of this. If you thought you were worried for Boyka when he was fighting on a bad knee, you ain’t seen nothing yet!
It’s been a long time coming to see Boyka step back into the ring, but with this great of a payoff, a wait of even ten years would have been well worth it. There just isn’t a better martial arts film series being produced in the English-speaking world right now than the “Undisputed” franchise, and the fourth chapter is both earth-shatteringly awesome and surprisingly emotional in ways that even the most die-hard of fans won’t see coming. Set your expectations as high as you want, “Boyka: Undisputed” is going to exceed them by a mile!