Calling all pill-poppers! ‘Project Hail Mary’ writer Drew Goddard teams up with Lana Wachowski for ‘Matrix 5’

Director Drew Goddard, who is perhaps best known for co-writing this year’s Project Hail Mary, 2015’s The Martian and directing 2011’s The Cabin in the Woods, is working on a 5th Matrix film for Warner.

Lana Wachowski, who created The Matrix trilogy with Lilly Wachowski (the two visionary directors are collectively known as “The Wachowskis”) will executive produce the project.

“Drew came to Warner Bros with a new idea that we all believe would be an incredible way to continue the Matrix world, by both honoring what Lana and Lilly began over 25 years ago and offering a unique perspective based on his own Continue reading

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He’s BAK! Action-comedy ‘Thai Fighters’ featuring Dan Chupong and Ip Man 3’s Simon Kook heads to the U.S.

U.S. distributor 3388 Films has acquired North American rights to Thai Fighters, an action-comedy co-directed by Chaiwat Sitalasai (who also stars) and Tawatchai Ladloy (Spirited Killer).

Set in the heart of Thailand, Thai Fighters follows two feuding villages that must bury their long-standing conflict when a brutal crime boss threatens them Continue reading

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That’s why they call this thing bloodsport, kid! ‘Black Panther’ actress to write and direct A24’s ‘Bloodsport’ remake

A remake of Newt Arnold’s 1988 film Bloodsport, the martial arts extravaganza that launched Jean-Claude Van Damme to superstardom, has been in development-hell for well over 14+ years.

Director Phillip Noyce (Salt) and screenwriter Robert Mark Kamen (Taken) were once attached. Then the project came into the hands of James McTeigue (Ninja Assassin) and Craig Rosenberg (The Uninvited), who would re-shape the “Frank Dux” narrative into the lives Continue reading

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Deal on Fire! The Final Master | Blu-ray | Only $10.13 – Expires soon!

The Final Master | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

The Final Master | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for Haofeng Xu’s highly-anticipated, award-winning martial arts film, The Master, re-titled as The Final Master (read our review) from Well Go USA Entertainment.

Xu made a name for himself by penning the screenplay for Wong Kar-Wai’s The Grandmaster. But it was 2011’s The Sword Identity, his directorial debut, which showed Xu’s true talent. Then came his acclaimed second film, 2012’s Judge Archer (aka Arrow Arbitration).

Xu’s trend in both films was presenting the martial arts in a less stylized and more realistic manner, perhaps not unlike the 2007 Japanese film Black Belt or David Mamet’s 2008 MA-themed Redbelt.

The Final Master stars Continue reading

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ANOTHER BRICK IN THE WALL! ‘Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In’ sequel begins production in April

Two years ago, director Soi Cheang Pou Soi (SPL II: A Time for Consequences), alongside producers Wilson Yip (Paradox) and John Chong (Paradox), revealed plans for both a prequel and a sequel to 2024’s Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In.

Now, those plans are finally moving forward. The follow-up to the hit Hong Kong thriller is set to begin filming in April, with a massive recreation of Kowloon Continue reading

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Who wants food? Eureka announces 4K Ultra HD for ‘Wheels on Meals’ starring Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao

"Wheels on Meals" Japanese Poster

“Wheels on Meals” Japanese Poster

Later this year, Eureka will be releasing a 4K Ultra HD for Wheels on Meals (aka Spartan X), a 1984 Golden Harvest classic directed by and starring Sammo Hung (Eastern Condors).

From a brand new 4K restoration comes Wheels on Meals, starring Hung, Jackie Chan, and Yuen Biao as the most exciting triple act in action-comedy movie history!

Fast food chefs Thomas (Chan) and David (Biao) find themselves cooking up trouble when detective Moby (Hung) involves them in the case of a missing heiress. The three friends need all of their daring and physical dexterity when they find themselves Continue reading

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More CG animal mayhem? Jackie Chan set for ‘Pawfect Agents’ and has joined the in-development film ‘Retired Cop’

Legendary martial arts icon Jackie Chan (The Shadow’s Edge, The Foreigner) will soon begin work on Pawfect Agents, an upcoming action-comedy that re-teams Jackie with his Bleeding Steel director, Leo Zhang (Chrysanthemum to the Beast). Following the footsteps of 2024’s Panda Plan and its sequel, Pawfect Agents will be a live-action/CG hybrid feature.

The film – from LinKEY Sanxing and Zhang’s Shangjia Film companies, with Cappu Films handling sales – follows a veteran agent (Chan) on the verge of retirement who is pulled back into the field after the Sanxingdui Golden Mask – one of China’s most prized Continue reading

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Deal on Fire! Ninja Trilogy | 4K Ultra HD | Only $58.99 – Expires soon!

Today’s Deal on Fire is for the 4K Ultra HD collection for Kino Lorber’s Ninja Trilogy, consisting of Menahem Golan’s Enter the Ninja (1981), Sam Firstenberg’s Revenge of the Ninja (1983), and Ninja III: The Domination (1984)

Though not connected in story, these three films popularized the image of the ninja in Western pop culture (known as the 80s “ninja boom” or “ninja craze”) with Continue reading

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Dolph Lundgren DIES HARD in the Trailer for ‘Straight Shot’ also starring Rachael Leigh Cook and Tyrese Gibson

"Straight Shot" Poster

“Straight Shot” Poster

Iconic action star Dolph Lundgren (Hellfire, Castle Falls) is back in Straight Shot, a Die Hard-esque thriller from writer/director Gabriel Sabloff (Beckman).

The film is headlined by David A.R. White, an actor, producer and director who is perhaps best known for 2025’s A Line of Fire, 2022’s Nothing is Impossible and 2020’s Beckman.

A bodyguard past his prime (White) fights through a skyscraper full of mercenaries to save his ex-fiancée trapped in an experimental coffin.

Lundgren is part of an ensemble cast that also includes Rachael Leigh Cook (She’s All That), Tyrese Gibson (2 Fast 2 Furious) and William Continue reading

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NO NEW WARS… unless ninjas are involved! Watch the Trailer for ‘Ninja Wars’ featuring Kane Kosugi and Yasuaki Kurata

"Ninja Wars: Blackfox vs Shogun's Ninja" Poster

“Ninja Wars: Blackfox vs Shogun’s Ninja” Poster

Craving some ninja action? Then today’s your lucky day. There’s a lot to unpack, so we’ll let the film’s official press release take it from here…

Nihon Eiga Broadcasting Corp. has unveiled the first visual and teaser trailer for Ninja Wars: Blackfox vs Shogun’s Ninja, a new action period film from internationally renowned director Koichi Sakamoto (Power Rangers, Ultraman, Kamen Rider).

The film stars Chihiro Yamamoto (Alice in Borderland Season 2), Kanon Miyahara (Ninja vs Shark), Nashiko Momotsuki (Mashin Sentai Kiramager Spin-Off: Yodonna), Kane Kosugi (Bang), Miki Mizuno (Guilty of Romance), and legendary martial arts actor Yasuaki Kurata (Eastern Condors), bringing together some of Japan’s leading action performers.

The project unites Continue reading

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Born a Ninja & Commando the Ninja | Blu-ray (Visual Vengeance)

Born a Ninja

On May 12, 2026, Visual Vengeance is releasing the Blu-ray for Born a Ninja and Commando the Ninja (aka American Commando Ninja), two martial arts films from 1988 that star Meng Fei (Face Behind the Mask) – secure your copy today from Goodie Emporium!

This shot-on-video martial-arts double feature from Joesph Lai and IFD Films unleashes pure 1980s ninja chaos as two unlikely heroes are dragged into a war over stolen germ-warfare secrets. Featuring disappearing ninja assassins, endless waves of Continue reading

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Mexicali (2026) Review

"Mexicali" Theatrical Poster

“Mexicali” Theatrical Poster

Director: Luke LaFontaine
Cast: Bren Foster, Tania Raymonde, Plutarco Haza, Kris Van Damme, Louis Mandylor
Running Time: 99 min. 

By Z Ravas

Mexicali is a movie that knows precisely what its audience wants and decides to give it to them without delay. It’s been two short years since Bren Foster broke out on the international action scene with Life After Fighting, and the filmmakers behind Mexicali understand that fans are likely curious if that movie was a one-off or if Foster will continue to cement his status as a rising star in the martial arts world; therefore, Mexicali opens with Foster in the ring for not one, not two, not three, but four fights in a row. Befitting a movie with a former stuntman in the director’s chair, the fight choreography here is top notch, and Foster very quickly proves that Life After Fighting was no fluke, as the man seems incapable of not going Beast Mode whenever a scene calls for him to throw a punch or kick.

Needless to say, the wait for Bren Foster’s follow-up to Life After Fighting was worth it. Mexicali arrives from Luke LaFontaine, the aforementioned former stuntman and second unit director with past credits on many Direct to Video action efforts like Jesse V. Johnson’s Savage Dog and The Mercenary. It’s likely no coincidence, then, that Jesse V. Johnson wrote the script Continue reading

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Forbidden City, The (2025) Review

“The Forbidden City” Poster

Director: Gabriele Mainetti
Cast: Yaxi Liu, Enrico Borello, Marco Giallini, Sabrina Ferilli, Shanshan Chunyu, Elisa Wong
Running Time: 139 min.

By Paul Bramhall

Is there another city in Europe that has more connection to the kung-fu genre than Rome? I’m going to say no. From providing the classic backdrop to Bruce Lee’s directorial debut Way of the Dragon in 1972, it would go on to inspire several other productions to film in its historical streets. Seasonal Films founder Ng See-Yuen would team up with Bruce Leung for 1974’s double bill of Kidnap in Rome and Little Godfather from Hong Kong. See-Yuen would return again for the Bruce Lee biopic Bruce Lee: The Man, The Myth in 1975. The 1982 Bruceploitation production Bruce Strikes Back would film there, swapping out Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris for Bruce Le and Hwang Jang Lee in an epic colosseum showdown. So it’s perhaps fitting that, in 2025, Italy decided to film its very own kung-fu movie there, in the form of The Forbidden City.

Following his superhero themed feature length debut with 2015’s They Call Me Jeeg Robot, and similarly themed sophomore production Freaks Out from 2021, The Forbidden City marks the 3rd outing for director Gabriele Mainetti. Turning his attention to a more grounded style of action, with the casting of Yaxi Liu as the lead it would seem he means business when it comes to having genuine martial arts talent onscreen. Continue reading

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Deal on Fire! Heart of the Dragon | Blu-ray | Only $19.99 – Expires soon!

Heart of Dragon | Blu-ray (Arrow)

Heart of Dragon | Blu-ray (Arrow)

Today’s Deal on Fire is the Blu-ray for Sammo Hung’s 1985 action-drama, Heart of the Dragon (aka First Mission).

Jackie plays a good-hearted cop looking after his learning-disabled brother Danny, played by Sammo, but doesn’t always succeed in keeping him out of trouble. When Danny is taken as a hostage, his brother will risk everything – his career and even his life – to rescue him, throwing it down as only Jackie Chan can.

Made the same year as Police Story, Heart of Dragon was a change of pace for the great action artists, giving them a chance to show of their acting chops as well as their stunt skills – even if they don’t ignore the latter!

The film also stars Continue reading

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How Action Directors Create High-Stakes Tension in Every Scene

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Great action scenes aren’t just about explosions or fast movement. They’re about tension. The kind that makes you lean forward, hold your breath, and feel like something could go wrong at any second. The best directors don’t rely on chaos. They control it. Every cut, every pause, every movement is intentional.

Filmmakers like John Woo and Tsui Hark understand that action only works when the stakes feel real. It’s not just what’s happening on screen. It’s how it’s built. In this piece, we break down how great action directors create that pressure and keep viewers engaged from start to finish.

Setting the Stakes: Why Tension Comes First

Tension is what makes an action scene work. Without it, all you’re left with is noise. Fast cuts, loud sounds, and movement that lacks meaning. Great directors understand this, so they build tension before anything escalates.

Think about high-risk settings like casinos, where every decision carries immediate consequences. That’s why scenes built around thrilling online casinos feel so intense even before anything goes wrong, because the outcome is uncertain and often tied to significant loss or gain. The pressure exists from the start.

This same principle applies to other high-stakes moments. A standoff, a chase, or even a quiet conversation on the edge of conflict. The tension comes from what could happen, not just what is happening.

From a filmmaking perspective, tension is deliberately engineered through stakes, uncertainty, and timing. Directors design scenes so that the audience anticipates consequences before they unfold.

At its core, tension is not about spectacle. It is about emotional investment. When the audience understands what is at risk, every second carries more weight, which keeps viewers engaged.

The Masters of Controlled Chaos: John Woo and Tsui Hark

John Woo and Tsui Hark are widely regarded as masters of action, but what sets them apart is precision. Their scenes may appear chaotic, yet every element is carefully constructed.

John Woo is known for slow-motion sequences, dual-wielding gunplay, and emotionally driven storytelling. His action scenes extend beyond visual spectacle. They emphasise loyalty, sacrifice, and character conflict, which heightens tension.

Tsui Hark approaches action through movement and visual energy. His camera rarely remains static, and his scenes often feature multiple layers of action unfolding simultaneously. Despite this complexity, the viewer is never disoriented. The visual language remains clear and intentional.

Both directors demonstrate a core principle of action filmmaking: clarity must be preserved even at peak intensity. Without spatial and narrative clarity, tension collapses into confusion.

Their influence continues to shape modern action cinema. From Hollywood productions to international films, their techniques remain foundational for building and sustaining tension.

Editing: Where Tension Is Really Built

Editing is where tension is ultimately constructed. What appears on screen is not only defined by what was filmed, but by how those shots are assembled.

The rhythm of cuts plays a crucial role. Fast cuts create urgency and chaos, while slower cuts extend moments and build anticipation. The timing of each cut determines how the audience processes information and emotion.

Holding a shot slightly longer than expected can create unease. The viewer begins to anticipate change, even in stillness. That anticipation is a key component of tension.

Cross-cutting is another essential technique. By shifting between characters or parallel situations, directors reveal connections and raise stakes simultaneously. This structure allows tension to build across multiple layers of the narrative.

In professional editing practice, tension is shaped through pacing, shot selection, and continuity. Each decision influences how the audience experiences time, pressure, and emotional escalation.

Pacing: Knowing When to Slow Down

Continuous action may seem engaging, but without variation, it loses impact. When intensity remains constant, it becomes predictable.

Effective pacing relies on contrast. Moments of quiet create space for tension to grow. A pause, a glance, or even silence can signal that something significant is about to occur. These moments prepare the audience for impact.

Stretching time before a key event increases anticipation. When the action finally unfolds, it feels more powerful because the audience has been prepared for it.

Directors intentionally structure scenes to alternate between tension and release. This contrast ensures that high-intensity moments retain their effect rather than becoming visually overwhelming.

Without controlled pacing, even well-executed action can feel flat. Balance is what gives action its weight.

Choreography: Action That Tells a Story

Effective action choreography goes beyond visual appeal. It communicates character, intention, and conflict.

A disciplined fighter moves differently from a reckless one. These differences are reflected in posture, timing, and decision-making during a scene. The audience understands character through movement.

Spatial awareness is equally important. Viewers need to understand where characters are positioned and how they interact with their environment. When spatial relationships are clear, the action becomes more immersive and believable.

Action sequences are also designed to escalate. Each movement builds on the previous one, increasing stakes and intensity. This progression keeps the audience invested.

In action design, choreography functions as a narrative tool. It reveals character traits while advancing the story, rather than serving as an isolated spectacle.

When choreography, clarity, and escalation work together, action becomes meaningful rather than decorative.

Tension Is What Makes Action Stick

Great action is not defined by speed or volume. It is defined by emotional impact. The most effective directors build tension with intention and precision.

When the stakes are clear and every element is purposeful, the audience remains engaged from beginning to end. Tension is what transforms action from noise into experience.

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