SEPTEMBER 23 ― Enjoying and evaluating action movies, especially those that fall under the martial arts/fight flick category can be pretty tricky. It’s a genre that’s.
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I love how much the internet has embraced Nicolas Cage over the past few years. He has always made
choices in whatever film he’s in, but a lot of the movies he’s made since around 2010 have been little seen low-budget nothings. But since 2018’s
Mandy, Cage has transformed into one of the main faces in effed-up, gonzo indie horror. Last year’s
Color Out of Space gave him another notch in that belt, and this year, the Sundance selection
Prisoners of the Ghostland seemed poised to give him yet another. And while it is very weird, and he is very Nicolas Cage in it, it fails to live up to much of its own potential.
Crazy Samurai Has an Epic 77-Minute Single-Take Martial Arts Action Scene
Crazy Samurai Has an Epic 77-Minute Single-Take Martial Arts Action Scene
The bulk of Crazy Samurai: 400 vs. 1 is made up of an unedited 77-minute long single-take action scene. Insane.
The art of the one continuous shot has wowed audiences for years, and in modern times has made the jump to action movies, with upcoming martial arts flick
Crazy Samurai: 400 vs. 1 ready to set the bar so high you ll need to enter the stratosphere to even get a glimpse of it. You see, Crazy Samurai: 400 vs. 1 will feature a 77-minute single-take action scene, and this one continuous shot will not include any editing. Indeed, these can only be the actions of one crazy samurai.