Never Back Down

Never Back Down

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Never Back Down

Djimon Hounsou, Sean Faris, Amber Heard, Cam Gigandet, Leslie Hope

Set against the action-packed world of Mixed Martial Arts, NEVER BACK DOWN is the story of Jake Tyler, a tough kid who leads with his fists, and, often, with his heart. Jake Tyler, played by Sean Fari...( read more  read more... )s, is the new kid in town with a troubled past. He has recently moved to Orlando, Florida with his family who has relocated to support his younger brother's shot at a professional tennis career. Jake was a star athlete on the football team at home, but in this new city he is an outsider with a reputation for being a quick tempered brawler.

Making an attempt to fit in, at the invitation of a flirtatious classmate, Baja (Amber Heard), Jake goes to a party where he is unwittingly pulled into a fight with a bully named Ryan McDonald (Cam Gigandet). While he is defeated and humiliated in the fight, a classmate introduces himself to Jake and tells him about the sport known as Mixed Marshall Arts (MMA). He sees a star in Jake and asks that he meet with his mentor, Jean Roqua, played by Djimon Hounsou (Blood Diamond, In America).

It is immediately apparent to Jake that MMA is not street fighting, but rather an art form he wants to master. Roqua will take Jake under his wing, but it is up to Jake to find the patience, discipline, willingness and reason within him to succeed. For Jake, there is much more at stake than mere victory. His decision will not just settle a score; it will define who he is.

Id: 10887841

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Recent Reviews


  • May 4, 2009
    Very typical in storyline structure to many of the 80?s Martial Arts films, in particular The Karate Kid and Bloodsport come to mind. It has all the crucial elements to make it a cheesy version of a film in this genre; the challenge, the love interest, the revenge, the training,...( read more) the Master/student relationship, mixed with the look of a modern day teen movie. The guilty pleasure of it, is that despite all the showboating and the reasons behind the storyline, parts were pretty entertaining and it was different to see a mix of Martial Arts.

    Djimon Hounsou, was possibly my biggest disappointment here, only because I feel he much worthier than this type of film, having said that, we were able to see his physical ability and his capabilities as a Martial Artist.
  • April 21, 2009
    This came with some bad reviews, I recall it been mainly done in by fans of MMA and UFC etc. However I wasnt bothered by the hype nor the critics to me this just liked it could be an entertaining martial arts movie and I wasnt wrong, well worth a watch nice simple storyline, good...( read more) fight scenes, I enjoyed it.
  • April 12, 2009
    And I thought they'd never make another Karate Kid movie...well ain't this a shocker!
    I wanted to piss on this movie, but admittedly with the list of classic cliches contained therein I can honestly say, I was entertained enough to give a crap :p
  • January 8, 2009
    "Never give up, never back down!"

    If there were still strings of drive-ins across that great country of yours, my American friends, there'd be a place for this bruising but brainless teen action-melodrama as the bottom half of a double bill no one would watch very closely...( read more) (though it would need to be severely trimmed from its unconscionably long 106-minute running-time - which wouldn't be difficult, as much of it is devoted to what amount to musical montages of training sessions with thumping background scores). But the drive-in is a thing of the past, alas, as are double features, and about the only place left for a film like Never Back Down is on late-hours cable, along with previous classics of the genre like Van Damme's No Retreat, No Surrender and the Best of the Best series.

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    Insofar as plot is concerned (to use the term loosely), the film - an obvious effort to capitalize on the current popularity of boxing-with-kickboxing bouts in the States - could just as well have been titled "The Mixed Martial Arts Kid," if it weren't for the fact that Sean Faris, the Tom Cruise lookalike - down to the same vacant smile and wooden demeanour - who plays supposed highschooler Jake Tyler, looks way too old to be called a kid (or play a highschooler).

    Jake, an Iowa teen guilt-ridden over the death of his father, whom he didn't stop from driving drunk, moves with mum (Leslie Hope) and younger brother (Wyatt Smith) to Orlando so his bro can take advantage of a tennis scholarship. But because of YouTube, Jake's reputation comes with him - he was caught on film in a notorious brawl on the football field - and the local champ in underground fight contests, arrogant Ryan McCarthy (Cam Gigandet), wants to take him on pronto and show everybody who's boss. So Ryan has his blonde bombshell of a girlfriend, Baja (!) (Amber Heard), entice Jake to a party where he lures the poor guy - via references to his father, sure to set him off - into a quick beating.

    Luckily Jake's already found an obligatory goofy sidekick named Max (Evan Peters), a wannabe fighter and brawling-enthusiast himself, who introduces his new pal to the Mr. Miyagi (or sensei) character, Jean Roqua (Djimon Hounsou), a Brazilian instructor who runs a gym in which Jake enrolls. It turns out that Roqua has a guilt complex, too - he left Brazil after failing to prevent the murder of his brother, poisoning his relationship with his father - and he teaches Jake the skills he needs, though he doesn't want the youngster to fight out of anger. As if this weren't routine enough, Jake and Baja become an item when she regrets her role in Ryan's nastiness and breaks up with him, leading Ryan to lure Jake into another fight by - you got it - thrashing Max. It all ends in a rib-cracking melee in a parking lot (shades of Step Up though not in the rain), in which - of course - our boy snatches victory the jaws of defeat.

    This is all pure formula, of course, and as far as that goes it's actually slightly superior, from a technical perspective, to the direct-to-DVD stuff that usually fills the genre, although there are entirely too many of those Rocky-style training montages and the fight sequences (shot by Swiss DP Lukas Ettlin) go in for swooning camera-work and whiplash cuts that leave them a blur. The animated "CSI"-like "special effects" to show ribs breaking in the final bouts are a mistake, too. And though the cast can't do much to elevate the trite material, some of them - Hounsou, Hope, tyke Smith, even the blank but handsome Faris - are better than the norm in films of this ilk.

    On the other hand, Heard (who would go on to be in a much better film, Pineapple Express) is flummoxed by a part that requires her on the one hand to play a good girl but soon has her wrestling around with Jake on his bedroom floor after trying on his sparring gloves and saying - in what has to be the film's worst line among many bad ones - "Oh, they're still sweaty!" And who could play a coed named Baja, anyway? Peters' nerdy Max and Gigandet's (another 26-year-old playing 17) smirking Ryan - who, of course, turns out to have daddy issues too - aren't much better.

    But what really sinks Never Back Down is the attempt to add some depth to what's just an old-fashioned sock-and-rock-'em story with dime-store psychological clichés about guilt, self-restraint, determination and redemption. The messages they convey are completely muddled in the end, anyway - ultimately all you take from the film is the old (but nevertheless valid) "a guy's gotta do what he's gotta do" but even worse is that they too often slow things to a crawl while we have to listen to another impassioned speech or sit through one more flashback to Jake and his dead dad.

    Strangely, if you can find it in you to ignore that rubbish and a training montage or two too-many, you might have a dumb but effective and entertaining (in a "The OC"-ish sort of way) slice of Mixed Martial Arts mayhem that would fit nicely into a 4 am watch. If, though, it's a genuine interest in MMA that drives you towards this, then David Mamet's Redbelt is the flick for you.
  • December 23, 2008
    Yes this does kinda add up to The Karate Kid for the Youtube generation, with an MTV makeover. This time using MMA basically like UFC, cage fighting using any fighting style. Despite the obvious plot and seeing this type of film more than a few times, this is pretty decent. It ha...( read more)s a strong cast and the fight scenes are well shot. There is an extra on the DVD to get each of the fights in the film broken down into how they were filmed etc which is pretty good...all this and the beautiful Amber Heard!
  • January 3, 2010
    YA DLairR FUCKinG BOnN POur un FilM De FighT !!!
  • January 2, 2010
    bruttiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • January 1, 2010
    oh my love it!!!!!!!!!!
  • December 31, 2009
    Thoroughly entertaining film with a somewhat unoriginal plot [like most films], great fight scenes. Good performance by Djimon Hounsou.
  • December 28, 2009
    It made me wanna punch anyone who hates this film.

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