Erica Li screenplay Sean Whitley dubbed version. Top credits Director Herman Yau. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Photos Top cast Edit. Yu-Hang To Yip man as Yip man. Kwok-Lun Lee Sheriff as Sheriff. Herman Yau. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Action Biography Drama History Sport. Not Rated. Did you know Edit. Murnau's horror classic.
Trailer Ip Man: The Final Fight. Photos Top cast Edit. Chun Ip Stall owner with phone as Stall owner with phone. Aki Chan Worker as Worker. Queenie Chu Sophie as Sophie. Herman Yau. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. In postwar Hong Kong, legendary Wing Chun grandmaster Ip Man is reluctantly called into action once more, when what begin as simple challenges from rival kung fu styles soon draw him into the dark and dangerous underworld of the Triads.
Rated PG for martial arts violence and some drug material. Did you know Edit. Trivia Ip Man's son, Ip Chun, makes a short cameo in the movie. Appearing when Ip Man was telephoned about his wife died. The first Type 2's were not produced until mid-November and the vehicle was not available for sale until User reviews 25 Review.
Top review. Ebola Syndrome is still one of the most disgusting movies I have ever seen and been guiltily entertained by. Forget Outbreak or Contagion, Ebola Syndrome was a far more disturbing movie about a viral outbreak. Forget Hannibal Lecter, Anthony Wong truly played a disturbing sociopath in that movie. The point is: they're not afraid to delve into the gritty, the ugly and the disgusting. Set against the big commercial movie cog machine and the Ip Man franchise, the majority of Yau-Wong penchant for grittiness is diluted and only some of it remains in Ip Man: The Final Fight.
So I attribute this issue to lazy writing. The retroactive voice-over device ends up killing a lot of the drama. The scene will be happening and the voice-over will cut in summing up the rest of the scene in past tense. It keeps glossing over by stating what happened instead of letting the audience experience what's happening in the now. Anthony Wong is very natural as Ip Man. He looks most like the real-life version of Ip Man and actually adopts a Foshan accent. He breathes many colors into the role and the scenes with Ip Man and his students is the heart of the film.
Anthony Wong is pretty much the best thing about this movie and his performance alone is the price of admission. Eric Tsang has a great supporting role as a Crane style master who befriends Ip Man.
Tsang and Wong share an awesome fight together. Not a lot of people remember that Eric Tsang started out as a stuntman; the fight looks very authentic. They were really smashing their forearms together.
Eric Tsang is a badass. Something I noticed about the cinematography was there were way too many crane shots in this film. There's a scene that ends on a connective moment between two characters and then it cuts to a crane shot backing away presenting a view of the entire rooftop set.
I have a theory about this. In Hong Kong, booking a crane from a production house is a planned expense and usually you would require more crew members or more time to set up a crane shot. Production houses in the Mainland will give crews an entire film equipment package in their deals, which includes cranes and jibs.
With the cheap labor and higher amount of crew members, a crane shot can be set up much faster in the Mainland. As a recent occurrence, a lot of Chinese productions lead by Hong Kong directors have recently been very crane shot-heavy.
Hong Kong directors, this needs to stop. You have to remember to pull back every once and a while. Just as a small footnote, I really hated the Bruce Lee cameo. Playing Bruce Lee in a film is by no means an easy feat but the actor they chose was abysmally awful. Mike Tyson Frank. Karena Ng Miss Wong.
Kent Cheng Fatso. Kai-Chung Cheung Hui Lik. Babyjohn Choi. Wilson Yip Director. Tai-lee Chan Writer. Lai-yin Leung Writer. Edmond Wong Writer. Raymond Pak-Ming Wong Producer. Kenny Tse Chung-To Cinematographer. Ka-Fai Cheung Film Editor. Kenji Kawai Original Music. View All Critic Reviews Aug 15, I have vastly enjoyed all of Donnie Yen's version of IP Man - and the 3rd and final installment is no exception. In fact I think they saved the very last for the very best and director Wilson Yip and Yen combined to make IP Man 3 the very best of the series.
While the first focused on the introduction of IP man, his loving wife Cheung Wing Sing portrayed Lynn Hung his extraordinary Wing Chun skills, his students, the foreign Japanese suppression and the 2nd IP man film focused on opposing martial schools, gangs and a different foreign suppression, this 3rd IP Man features a legendary boxing icon, Tyson bouts with Tai boxing and an exciting Wing Chun vs Wing Chun featuring Zhang Jin finale that was simply awesome.
The plot of fighting to save a school vs opposing foreign bullies and gangs was simple, and it once again featured IP Man singlehandedly overpowering an entire group of vicious hoodlums in shipyard as was also featured in the previous IP Man films, but that isn't close to highlighting the tale of the tape with IP Man 3. It even featured a brief cameo young teen portrayal of late martial arts icon Bruce Lee portrayed by actor Kwon-Kwan Chan Both the music background score and Camera work was simply brilliant - even in one top fight scene with the Thai boxer, you get to see the fight from a birds' eye view, while that inspirational musical background score played on.
Of course Tyson's acting role is pretty simple and I didn't expect anything different than the villainous smirk and hulking punches- I got exactly what I wanted from him which also includes the idea of involving him into the I man film. I never would have thought I would have had the joy and pleasure of seeing him in this film. I thought IP man 3 was a more well-paced, added more intriguing various fighting styles vs boxing,.. We saw how emotionally torn she was between the dangers her husband has to endure, the safety of their son, the enjoyable moments the couple continue to put together, and sudden crisis they have to fight and cope with the deadly disease once it was discovered.
Even seeing IP Man breaking down, these heart gripping , emotional moments brought some of the most moving moments. The sign-off memorial and passing of Cheung Wing Sing at the end was heart-breaking and touching. We could see the final Wing Chun battle predictably coming, but the cinematography and choreography that was applied and involved was simply breath taking. And it was crystal clear, clean and very easy and enjoyable to view, none of the shaky-jumpy camera we tend to see in too many action fighting scenes, And it involved several ways of fighting and engaging - from fighting pole stick, Yet once again, I was left saying ' Wow".
It was truly awesome and something to see if you enjoyed the best of martial arts fighting This is something special to me that I tend to re-watch over and over, again and again. So brilliantly done. What a terrific way to end an extraordinary series. On a scale of 1 to 10, I'd give IP Man 3 an 9. Jul 14, Yet another solid entry in the series. No sign of slowing down yet.
Marcus W Super Reviewer.
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