Tom-Yum-Goong

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Tom-Yum-Goong

The English-language Thai movie poster.
Directed by Prachya Pinkaew
Produced by Somsak Techaratanaprasert,
Prachya Pinkaew,
Sukanya Vongsthapat
Written by Prachya Pinkaew,
Kongdej Jaturanrasamee,
Napalee,
Piyaros Thongdee,
Joe Wannapin
Starring Tony Jaa,
Nathan Jones,
Petchtai Wongkamlao,
Bongkoj Khongmalai,
Xing Jing
Cinematography Nattawut Kittikhun
Distributed by Sahamongkol Film International
Release date(s) Thailand 11 August 2005
Running time 110 minutes
Country Thailand
Language Thai,
English
Budget 300 million baht
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile
This article is about the 2005 Thai action film. For the Thai food dish see Tom yum.

Tom-Yum-Goong (Thai: ต้มยำกุ้ง, distributed as Warrior King in the UK, as The Protector in the US, as Neak Prodal Junboth in Cambodia and as Honour of the Dragon in the Netherlands) is a 2005 Thai martial arts film starring Tony Jaa. The movie was directed by Prachya Pinkaew, who also directed Jaa's prior breakout film Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior. As with Ong-Bak, the fights were choreographed by Jaa and his mentor, Panna Rittikrai. In the United States, it's being endorsed by Quentin Tarantino as "Quentin Tarantino Presents The Protector".

Contents

[edit] Plot

Kham is the last of a family line of guards who once watched over the King of Thailand's war elephant. He grew up forming close relations to his elephant, Por Yai and his calf, Korn. During an elephant roundup, Kham's father is tricked into bringing Por Yai to a staged inspection, and the elephants are stolen with help from Mr. Suthep, a local MP who is collaborating with elephant poachers.

Kham raids Mr. Suthep's home, disrupting a party, demanding to be told where his elephants are. Mr. Suthep reluctantly tells Kham that a Vietnamese gangster named Johnny has taken them to Sydney, Australia. He shows Kham a photograph of Johnny standing outside Tom Yum Goong Otob, a Thai restaurant there.

Kham makes his way down under. On his way, it is revealed that the local Australian news has reported the theft of the elephants. Sergeant Mark, a Thai-Australian policeman in Sydney is introduced. He is filming with news reporters about Asian communities in downtown Sydney. In the middle of the filming, he is informed by his partner Rick that a Korean minimart is being robbed. Mark enters the store and subdues the robber, a teenager named Tui, and subsequently releases him in a side street much to the surprise of Rick. But it is Sergeant Mark's way of keeping peace in the community.

A local Chinese gang is in the middle of a power struggle. Transsexual gang leader Madame Rose tries repeatedly to please her uncle, Mr. Sim, only to be looked down on. She holds a grudge against him and vows revenge.

Kham (Tony Jaa) is the last in a family line of guards who have once watched over the King of Thailand's war elephants.
Enlarge
Kham (Tony Jaa) is the last in a family line of guards who have once watched over the King of Thailand's war elephants.

Kham finally arrives in Sydney. After bumping into a Jackie Chan lookalike, he gets into a taxi driven by Jimmy, who is a crook in disguise. As a result, the taxi is stalked by the police the moment it leaves the airport. Mark is notified about Jimmy and gives chase in the city center, cornering Jimmy and Kham in an alley. Jimmy threatens to shoot Kham, but is subsequently disarmed by Kham and shot dead by Inspector Vincent. Vincent then opens fire at Kham, causing him to run off. Puzzled by the actions of their superior, Mark and Rick runs after Kham.

Kham is caught and driven away in Mark's car. Mark questions Kham about his motives in Sydney. Kham explains that he is looking for his relatives, who "look like elephants". On the way to the police station, the car passes by Tom Yum Goong. Kham sees Johnny walking out of the shop. He starts yelling and asks Mark and Rick to follow his car. When the officers refuse, Kham strangles Rick, causing the car to lose control. Kham then runs off, severs his bonds and engages Johnny on a bridge when he is talking to Pla, a Thai student working as a prostitute.

Kham is held back by Johnny's minions. In spite of Pla's warnings not to get involved with the gang, Kham follows a minion as he jumps off a bridge. Suddenly, another gangster gets off a truck and tries to attack Kham. His knife is kicked from his hand. Kham then kicks the glass out of a tall street lamp, smashing it to pieces.

Johnny is in the middle of a drug deal inside a warehouse, where the minion leads Kham. While Kham begins to fight his men, the drug dealers get fed up and leave. Outraged, Johnny summons countless extreme sports enthusiasts, who arrive to fight Kham. Kham defeats them one by one, and finally faces a quad bike rider, whom he takes down as well.

Exhausted, Kham falls asleep in an alley. Pla finds him and brings him to her home. In his sleep, he dreams of an epic battle involving war elephants and the Jaturangkabart, the elephant protectors. When Pla leaves, Kham wakes up to the sound of police sirens, and climbs down a pipe to make his escape.

Meanwhile, Mark and Rick are taking the flak from Senior Inspector John Lamond for losing Kham and causing mayhem in the streets. The are taken off the case and re-assigned to provide security for the Secretary-General's meeting with Mr. Sim. In that particular meeting, Pla dresses up in a bikini and enters the mud bath with Mr. Sim and the Secretary-General. She splashes around in the mud, doing a sexy dance, while she is recorded by the Secretary-General's camera phone.

Suddenly, he feels pain in his chest, and Mr. Sim asks her to get him medicine. While she is in the cloakroom, Tui enters and shoots Mr. Sim, the Secretary-General and two other prostitutes dead. Mark and Rick are surprised by this, and it is revealed that the murder is instigated by Inspector Vincent. Vincent then kills Rick, and tries to frame Mark for the murder. Mark escapes, but is eventually captured.

Pla manages to escape, taking the camera phone with her. When she returns to her flat, she is grabbed by four policemen. As she is about to be loaded into the car, Kham arrives and beats up the cops. After she is saved, Pla reveals to Kham that she used to be a waitress at Tom Yum Goong Otob. Since Johnny and his men took over the management, it has been a living hell for all those who work there. She reveals a secret area in the back of the restaurant, reserved for VIPs.

With Pla's help, Kham enters Tom Yum Goong. He fights his way through the gangsters and into the VIP area. He makes his way up the tower, beating up more gangsters on the way. He reaches the dining hall at the top, where customers are dining on exotic animals like scorpions. Kham yells, "Where are my elephants?" and is met with the laughter of Johnny and his men. Johnny taunts Kham with Korn's bell. This enrages Kham and he fights and defeats Johnny and his men.

Kham enters the storage area, with various animals like monkeys and pangolins, ready to be butchered and eaten. He cries out for Korn. He finds Mark tied up in a room filled with Thai prostitutes. He frees Mark and hides in a corner. Suddenly, Kham is touched by a snout of an elephant. It is Korn. Kham and Mark escape the premises with the help of the Korean shopkeeper minutes before the police arrive. Meanwhile, Madame Rose is made the new leader of the Chinese gang after she murders two other possible successors.

The new manager of Tom Yum Goong is arrested for serving endangered animals. Inspector Vincent initiates a search for Kham and Mark, who are hiding in a Buddhist monastery. Eventually, the monastery is raided and set on fire. Fortunately, Kham and Mark are not there when it happens. But then Kham returns, and he faces a fierce Capoiera fighter and another martial artist wielding dual swords. Kham defeats them both. However, his third opponent, a giant wrestler, proves way too much for Kham. Kham is only saved when the police arrive. He flees with Mark.

Mark and Kham sleep on the grass facing Sydney Harbour. Mark offers to get Kham out of the country, but Kham refuses. By the next morning, Kham has left with Korn. Mark is then discovered by several policemen, sending him to deal with Inspector Vincent, whom Pla has revealed to be the real murderer.

Kham arrives at a conference hall where Madame Rose is having a press conference. Korn runs in, scaring off every one while Kham engages the gangsters. He later finds Korn in a lift lobby, and Vincent threatens to shoot him. Mark suddenly arrives on the floor in a lift and disarms Vincent, shooting his men dead. He beats up Vincent while insulting him. Suddenly, Johnny enters and shoots Vincent dead, telling Mark that he came to settle the score. He then leaves and taunts Mark to catch him.

Kham finds himself with Korn in a huge room, and he is shown the skeleton of Por Yai, encrusted with jewels as a gift to Madame Rose. He is so upset by the loss of his companion that he spends a minute being beaten up by Rose's men while he reminisces. Finally, he does decide to fight and beats them all up. Eventually, the wrestlers are called in. Korn is grabbed and thrown through a glass wall. Kham is knocked into the elephant ornament, and two leg bones fall off. Kham ties them around his arms and uses them as clubs to knock the wrestlers out. The two bones then splinter into two sharp fragments.

Kham then remembers something his father told him. The weakest parts of the elephant are its tendons. If they are severed, the elephant will fall. Kham then does that to the hulking wrestlers, who fall quickly. He stops Madame Rose before she can escape in a helicopter, and the two crash through the roof and land in the room. Madame Rose is knocked unconscious, while Kham's fall is cushioned by the tusks of Por Yai.

Back in the lobby, Mark is shown Pla, and is forgiven by Inspector Lamond. He is shown his new partner, who speaks Thai. Mark is then asked by a reporter about Kham.

Finally, a narration from Mark about elephants is heard, with scenes of Kham's childhood shown. Mark explains that Thai people treat elephants like they are their brothers, and they hate people who hurt them. Thais love peace, but dislike people who take liberties. In the last scene, Kham is reunited with Korn.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Cameo appearances

[edit] Production

[edit] Technical aspects

Compared to Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior, which was noted for its lack of wirework and CGI, this movie uses CGI in several scenes, from the obvious (helicopter scene, and an entirely computer-animated dream sequence), to the subtle (a glass window shattering in the four-minute steadicam shot that follows Jaa up several flights of stairs as he dispatches thug after thug in dramatic fashion).

Tony Jaa and a stuntperson performing the final attack shot. This is an example of Tom Yum Goong's combination of CGI and real stuntwork.
Enlarge
Tony Jaa and a stuntperson performing the final attack shot. This is an example of Tom Yum Goong's combination of CGI and real stuntwork.

The largest example of CGI is Tony Jaa's dramatic leap from the top of a building to attack Madame Rose with a double knee attack. While the background was blue screen (as shown on the right) with the Australian backdrop added in post production, the long fall shown on screen was real as Jaa and a stuntperson pulled the scene off, landing on large mats below. Even in scenes like this with blue screen, a stunt double would be called in for the lead actor, but Jaa once again made sure he did the stunt himself.

[edit] Fighting styles

Tony Jaa incorporates a new style of muay Thai into this movie (มวยคชสาร, "muaykodchasarn", roughly translated as "Elephant Boxing"), emphasizing grappling moves. "I wanted to show the art of the elephant combined with muay Thai," Tony told the Associated Press in an interview, adding that the moves imitate how an elephant would defend itself, with the arms acting as tusks.

[edit] Stuntwork

Many aspiring stuntmen sent demo tapes, hoping to be cast in the film. An American stunt actor was cast but didn't properly take the impact and was injured on the first take. "He kicked me, I used my arm to block his kick, and he fell down hard," Tony told the Associated Press.

But, no one was hospitalized in the making of the film, with injuries limited to "bumps and bruises, muscle tears, a little something like that. Nothing major," Tony said.

The fights include duels with:

[edit] Alternate versions

  • International sales rights (outside Asia) were purchased by TF1, which made suggestions for re-editing to director Prachya Pinkaew, who then made some cuts that slightly reduce the film's running time from its original 110 minutes.
  • The UK title is Warrior King, and the theatrical release was on July 28, 2006.
  • In France and other parts of Europe the film was called Honour of the Dragon.

[edit] Subtitle issues

As with Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior English-language subtitled DVDs of Tom-Yum-Goong were not made available when the movie was distributed for home video in Asia. One of the pirated versions of the movie had subtitles that refer to the main character as "Jin" despite it saying "Kham" on the back of the box. Also, the subtitles for the spoken English did not match what was being said. Counterfeit editions of the DVD also marketed the film as "Ong Bak 2", which was the Thai working title of the film but has been re-applied to the sequel to Ong-Bak, Ong-Bak 2.

[edit] US release as The Protector

The Weinstein Company purchased the US distribution rights for Tom-Yum-Goong and retitled it The Protector (also the name of a 1985 Jackie Chan film). The film was released theatrically in the US on September 8, 2006 and later on the company's Dragon Dynasty DVD label.

For the US theatrical cut, the film's length was reduced by at least 25 minutes, even going as far as inexplicably trimming down some of the fight scenes. Out of all cuts outside of Thailand, this is the shortest cut of the film, even more so than the European cuts. It also features a new score by RZA. Some parts of the missing footage (including cuts to the "bone breaker" fight and Madame Rose envisioning herself in a red dress as queen) appeared in the US trailer and US TV Spots.

Also, The Protector is partially subtitled and partially dubbed, with all of Jaa's dialogue subtitled. Several changes were made to the plot through editing and subtitles that did not match the spoken Thai and Chinese dialogue.

Changes that were made to the US theatrical release include:

  • The historical role of the Thai warriors is given in more detail in the opening prologue
  • Scenes of TV reporters given tour of Sydney by Sgt. Mark are removed.
  • Scenes of Sgt. Mark handling robbery and releasing the would-be assassin are removed.
  • Kham's father, rather than being injured, died by the gunshot.
  • Tony Jaa's lines now include "You killed my father!"
  • Madame Rose loses face and is denied a "security" contract over bad turtle soup instead of the Chinese business leader's refusal to deal because of bad terms.
  • Madame Rose is never mentioned as being a transsexual.
  • The ending has been trimmed to imply that Madame Rose is dead rather than just injured after her fall through the roof.
  • Johnny does not appear at the end of the movie to kill Madame Rose's lover.
  • Exposition is given to further explain the cutting of tendons to defeat the bruisers at the end.
  • The ending epilogue given by Sgt. Mark in the US version is significantly different and nobler than the Thai's version which is whimisical and comic relief in tone and is much less concerned with resolution.

[edit] Reception

For the film's opening weekend in the US, it was ranked No. 4 at the box office, earning $5,034,180 and has earned $12,044,087 overall in the US. It ranks 67th among all martial arts films released in US theaters and 14th among foreign language films. It is the most successful Thai film released in the US.[1]

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Box Office Mojo, Weekend Box Office, September 8-10, 2006 (retrieved September 20, 2006).

[edit] External links

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