10 Certified Fresh 2014 Movies That Nobody Saw

3. The Raid 2

Palo Alto Emma Roberts
Sony Pictures Classics/Stage 6 Films

In a culture obsessed with sequels, The Raid 2 oddly did only half as well as its predecessor - literally, as The Raid 2 took $2 mil in the US, compared to The Raid's $4 mil, and did just a few thousand pounds better in the UK. This for a sequel that is more souped-up, more innovative, more confident than the original, not to mention bulging full of some of the 21st century cinema's greatest action scenes.

The more convoluted plot of Gareth Evans's follow-up takes cues from the great crime movies - The Godfather, Yojimbo, Infernal Affairs - but borrows little from existing action cinema. Evans rather prefers to forge his own path, pushing martial arts superstar-in-the-making Iko Uwais into a close-quarter fight in a toilet cubicle, a sickeningly violent mass brawl in a mud-filled prison yard, and hand-to-hand combat taking place during a Jakarta car chase.

Though it's not as sleek as The Raid, what The Raid 2 gains in its more operatic form is a sense of boundless creativity. In terms of the action sequences, Evans constantly over-reaches, and still manages to nail everything he sets out to do.

Contributor
Contributor

Lover of film, writer of words, pretentious beyond belief. Thinks Scorsese and Kubrick are the kings of cinema, but PT Anderson and David Fincher are the dashing young princes. Follow Brogan on twitter if you can take shameless self-promotion: @BroganMorris1