

ザ・レイド GOKUDO
Trailer
Overview
上層部からマフィアへの潜入捜査を命じられ、組織と関わりのある悪徳政治家や警察関係者を暴き出すことになった警官ラマ。囚人を装って刑務所に入った彼は、マフィアのボスを父親に持つウチョと出会って組織のメンバーとして迎えられる。だが、父親に対する反発と野心を募らせたウチョが新興組織と協力することになってから、裏社会で抗争が勃発してしまう。やがてラマは、ゴトウ率いる日本人ヤクザ、ハンマー・ガールやバッド・ボーイといった特殊な殺し屋たちとの対峙を余儀なくされていく。<インドネシアで製作され、その鮮烈なバイオレンス描写で称賛されたアクション映画の続編。前作で激闘を繰り広げた警官ラマが、マフィアに潜入した果てに日本ヤクザとの抗争や殺し屋たちとの戦いに身を投じる。イコ・ウワイスが前作より続投し、その脇を松田龍平、遠藤憲一、北村一輝ら日本人キャストが固める。拳のほかにバットやハンマーも繰り出す肉弾戦に加え、男たちの思惑が激突する熱いドラマも見もの。>
製作費: $4,500,000 (7億円)
興行収入: $6,566,916 (10億円)
純利益: $2,066,916 (3億円)
Cast
Reviews / 口コミ
あなたの評価を記録する
TMDB ユーザーの口コミ
The Raid 2 is more ambitious than the original, with a more complex story and some of the best choreographed and directed action sequences ever made. What more could a hardcore action fan ask for?
A lot more involved than the original _Raid_ film, with a more complex story taking place over more time and in more places. Sounds great, but I think the smaller, contained tale of the original actually served the premise better. But make no mistake, _The Raid 2_ is **awesome**. It provokes more discussion than the original, and the fight scenes (which let's be honest, is 100% the reason we're all here) are **absolutely** up to specs. _Final rating:★★★½ - I really liked it. Would strongly recommend you give it your time._
Having miraculously recovered from his experiences just three year earlier, our now way more experienced cop “Rama” (Iko Uwais) finds that these thugs were but the tip of the criminal iceberg and that he and his family are now firmly in the sights of the bosses intent of revenge. It seems the only way he can keep them safe is to go undercover and expose himself to a nest of brutal drug dealers and corrupt officials - including some in his own force. So, “Yuda” is born. His task begins in prison and by ingratiating himself with the ambitious “Uco” (Arifin Petra), the rather duplicitous son of one of the nasties who’s sense of honour (and his henchmen) has hitherto kept the peace on the outside, he hopes to discover who is threatening his loved ones. Meantime, there are some changes going on amidst this hostile fraternity that could endanger the fragile familial truces and risk an all-out gang war. The thing about the first “Raid” was the dark, claustrophobic, environment in which our ninja hero did his stuff. This, though, takes their battles out into more open spaces and throws that intensity under a tuk-tuk. There’s boundless athleticism here and the choreography of the combat routines is precise and impressive, but the story is old hat and it suffers fairly early on from a bit of “been there, seen that”. It tries to present us with a plot, but that’s all too easily subsumed into the repetitive action scenes that make these martial arts look as menacing as a pas-de-deux in bloodstained Levi’s. It’s also far, far, too long as there’s such an inevitability about the whole thing that it could lose an hour and cut to the chase much sooner. Uwais is a charismatic man and the direction gets us up close and personal with the fighting, but once you’ve seen a guy smashed against a wall, or a room full of furniture destroyed for the fifth time, it all starts to get dull. Not a patch on the 2011 original, sorry.
























