Heej Jocke







Hej Jocke  här som du ser på bilderna där. men nu har ja gjort en blogg med många bra i filmerna ..och inte bara film O lite om mej själv vad ja har fått vara med om o vad ja har jobbat med..
 ni som inte vet vem jag är, är det jag som är FilmJocke från Bandit rock förra året med Rivstarts Gänget i Göteborg o prata film.. men annars är ja en helt vanlig kille som kommer från en liten Kommun som heter Uddevalla men. men är stor fan av film



Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li bringar Capcom


Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li Capcom video game brings the classic back to the silver screen after 15 year absence. The leading role (played by Smallville's Kristin Kreuk) is a pianist who comes from a wealthy family of Bangkok. As a child, she witnesses the abduction of her good contacts, businessman, father of the power-hungry criminals M. Bison (Neal McDonough) and his Mammoth Enforcer Balrog (Michael Clarke Duncan).

As an adult, is Chun-Li the chance to avenge his family against the Bison and his shadowy crime syndicate, Shadaloo. Mentoring by King Gen Fu Master (Mortal Kombat's Robin Shou), Chun-Li will champion warriors can take the fight directly to the Bison. She will meet a friend - Law enforcement authorities Charlie Nash (Chris Klein) and Maya Sunee (Moon Bloodgood) - and enemy - the masked, talon-wielding Vega (Taboo, in The Black Eyed Peas) - both in her quest for justice.

Oh, Jean-Claude, Where Art Thou? God help me, but I think I actually enjoyed the 1994 Street Fighter movie more than this release. While the original movie can be awful and campy enough to Joel Schumacher Bat-films seem like The Dark Knight, by comparison, at least had some personality and MST3K-esque mock-dignity for that. It provoked some kind of response from a viewer, which is more than can be said about this Dour reboot. Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li is a mindless, soulless, JOYLESS business, chock full of bad acting, bad dialogue and horrible battle sequences.

Kristin Kreuk is the only cast member who does not embarrass himself, but that's not saying much. She acquit themselves competent enough in the fight scenes, but in a film called Street Fighter, you expect that there are a lot of kick-ass fights, right? Instead, we are exposed to tired, wire-work sequences that went out of fashion years ago, no one ever seems in any real risk to be injured in these battles, and you do not get any feeling of a character's brute force or skill. There are better staged and more fun fights between Peter and the chicken on Family Guy. The film limps along, simply from a bad orchestrated set-piece to another high point with a whimper rather than a bang


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