There’s no better way to get into the mind of a martial artist than watching them on the biggest screen you own. So on my list of the top ten greatest martial arts films of 2014, the list is dominated by movies that are in theaters and made for the big screen. So, if you ask me to watch these movies, you’re going to have to do a little more than ask me. You’re going to have to commit.
I just watched the newest and very last film of the greatest action-drama-comedy filmmaker of all time, Bruce Lee. I watched it with the best director Ive ever seen work. Then I watched it with my dad and my brother and my brother’s girlfriend. Then I watched it with my brother-in-law, who is a martial arts instructor. Then I watched it with people who are the same age as me. Then I watched it with my girlfriend.
I was originally planning to watch It Happened One Night, but that turned out to be a terrible film. Now I’m watching The Man with Two Eyes and I’m actually quite happy with it. The Man and his family are on the island, where they are forced to do martial arts for the sake of their survival. The film manages to make the martial arts look not just cool, but also, and most importantly, realistic.
The Man is the only one who can fight back against the Visionaries and save his family. The Man is also the only one who has a choice. He can only fight back with his fists, his bare fists. The Man doesn’t have to worry about the bullets, because he always has his bare fists. The Man can only fight with his bare fists, because he’s not in any illusions about what an illusion is.
The Man does have a point, because he doesn’t look like he can fight with his bare fists. He looks like he was born to run a fast-paced video game, and a martial arts film is the perfect outlet for that. It’s also good because it keeps the film from being overly martial-arts-y.
The Man is actually one of those guys who makes the most money in a film doing what he does best. He can fight with his bare fists, because he doesnt care if he comes up with some crazy move. He doesnt need to worry about doing anything that makes him look like a wimp. He can just go nuts and show up to fight with his bare fists.
In fact, one of the primary reasons that the Man is a star is that he doesnt think he needs to be looking like a wimp. He’s not trying to look like a wimp, he’s just trying to be a man. By showing up to fight with his bare fists, he’s showing that he knows what he’s doing. He’s not trying to look like a wimp. He’s just fighting because he wants to.
So yeah, you can just go nuts and show up to fight with your bare fists, but thats not the point. I like that the Man is not trying to look like a wimp. By showing up to fight with his bare fists, hes trying to show that he knows what hes doing, and that hes not afraid of a little pain.
I love seeing the whole “no man is a hero, but every man is a hero” angle play out. It’s like the dude who gets hit in the head by a rock in the first ten minutes of a Bruce Lee movie, and then starts to cry and says, “That hurts my head!”. It just shows you how much of an emotional and powerful force martial arts have.
As for the Man, he’s a badass. A warrior who makes you realize that you have no idea what hes doing in there except to get into trouble and then get through it. I loved watching him get punched in the head by a guy that was wearing a ring on his finger. His reflexes are amazing, and I think hes going to go down in history as the first person to actually fight the guy that just hit him with the rock.