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Tekken

Tekken

  • Status: Released
  • 20-03-2010
  • Runtime: 92 min
  • Score: 5.372
  • Vote count: 690

In the year of 2039, after World Wars destroy much of the civilization as we know it, territories are no longer run by governments, but by corporations; the mightiest of which is the Mishima Zaibatsu. In order to placate the seething masses of this dystopia, Mishima sponsors Tekken, a tournament in which fighters battle until only one is left standing.

Jonathan Patrick Foo

Jin Kazama

Kelly Overton

Christie Monteiro

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa

Heihachi Mishima

Ian Anthony Dale

Kazuya

Luke Goss

Steve Fox

Lateef Crowder

Eddy Gordo

Mircea Monroe

Kara

Tamlyn Tomita

Jun Kazama

Cung Le

Marschall Law

Candice Hillebrand

Nina Williams

Marian Zapico

Anna Williams

Darrin Henson

Raven

Anton Kasabov

Sergei Dragunov

Taiyo Sugiura

Lee Chaolan

Jae Hee

Hwoarang

Gary Ray Stearns

Yoshimitsu

Jonathan Kowalsky

Vosk

Gary Daniels

Bryan Fury

Cassie Shea Watson

Tekken Med-Tech

Alan B. McElroy

Tekken Arena Attendant

Dallas Liu

Young Jin Kazama

John Pyper-Ferguson

Bonner

Kamurai

Boring watch, probably won't watch again, and can't recommend. I tried and fell asleep on this 3 times. There is plenty of things happening, but who cares, really? The movie goes far out of the way to disconnect the audience from the characters, world and action. Maybe I'll update this if I can ever get through it, but I can't see it being better than what I think it is right now. Unless you're just a big Tekken fan, go watch "Dead or Alive" instead.

The Movie Mob

**Tekken blends 80s fighting movie elements with early 2000s action and storytelling to make a decent video game film filled with nostalgia, good choreography, and a ridiculous amount of cheese.** Tekken is one of the most 80s movies released in 2010! The story follows a dystopian future where evil corporations control the world and throw an annual fighting tournament to appease the disgruntled masses. The slums of this movie look torn right out of Demolition Man or Judge Dredd, and many of the costumes rock the 80s aesthetic as well. But none of that is necessarily a bad thing. As far as video game movies go, Tekken was pretty solid. The character designs stay faithful to the games, the fight scenes are entertaining and have solid choreography, and the acting, while cheesy, is alright. Tekken doesn't do anything new with a script that follows the same beats as The Running Man, Death Race, or any other dystopian death game movie, but that is a reoccurring formula for a reason - it's fun! Without knowing much about the games, I was able to enjoy this cheesy old-school action film that felt equal parts 80s and early 2000s. It's not exceptional, but it is entertaining if you want to enter a time machine to decades past and see some people get punched.