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  1. Check out our compilation of #TonyJass best fight scenes. Let us know what is your favorite scene in the comments! ⚡FaceBook: https://bit.ly/FINActionFB💥Ins...

    • 8 min
    • 12.4M
    • FilmIsNow Action Movies
  2. #TonyJaa is one of the legends of martial arts cinema, so we decided to make a compilation of some of his best fight scenes. 👊 Want to be notified when we p...

    • 10 min
    • 6.9M
    • FilmIsNow Action Movies
  3. Buy/Rent Ong Bak: https://play.google.com/store/movies/details/Ong_Bak_The_Thai_Warrior?id=fuBsm00uBGY&hl=en&gl=USThai stuntman Tony Jaa makes his starring...

    • 15 min
    • 73.7M
    • Cinewatch
    • Truck Fight
    • Slaver Fight
    • Street Fight
    • Torture Fight
    • Medical Center Fight
    • The One-Shot Restaurant Fight
    • Village Fight
    • Three-Way Fight
    • Bone Breaking Fight
    • Club Fight

    This scene would already be memorable for marking Jaa's first appearance in a big-budget Hollywood production, but its a well put together scene in its own right. His character's speed and ferocity almost completely overwhelm Paul Walker's, and its all the protagonist can do to stay alive during the fight. Unfortunately, there are a few technical p...

    There's a reason why the antagonists in revenge flicks tend to be complete and utter bastards. If they weren't such terrible people, the audience might stop to wonder if the vengeance the hero wreaks upon them isn't somewhat excessive. Ong-Bak 2 knows this, and that's why one of the most brutal fights in the film pits the protagonist against a bunc...

    Jaa's appearance in the venerable Ip Man franchise could be considered little more than a cameo, but the actor manages to be memorable nonetheless. Perhaps it's his utter relentlessness in pursuing Max Zhang's Cheung Tin Chi, or maybe it's that sweet hat he wears throughout. Either way, having the chops to match an Ip Man protagonist would earn him...

    There's no denying that the Ong-Bak sequels are a pair of really weird movies. Moving from contemporary Thailand to the 15h century Thailand is a pretty big shift, and the plots of the films just get stranger as they go on. Still, they did have some good fight scenes. Ong-Bak 3 opens with protagonist Tien in chains, being beaten with staff at the b...

    Jaa's first foray into the Hong Kong action scene finds him playing Chatchai, a prison guard forced to overlook Warden Ko Chun's illegal activities for the sake of his ill daughter. Eventually, he turns on his boss to help the wrongfully imprisoned Kit. This leads to a final fight in a high rise medical facility against his former boss. Ko Chun is ...

    Ong-Bak may have been the film that brought Tony Jaa to the attention of western audiences, but it was 2005's The Protector that cemented him as a star to watch. Featuring some of his most brutal fights yet, the film stars Jaa as Kham, who is trying to get his stolen elephant back. Anyone who stands in the way of that goal is going to have a bad da...

    At the climax of the movie, the main character Tien finds that there is some truth to the saying that you can't go home again. In his case, it's because the mercenaries that he had called family are waiting to ambush him when he returns. That's a hell of a rough homecoming. This fight is memorable because of the sheer amount of fighting styles on d...

    Ah, Tripple Threat. An ensemble cast of martial arts film stars coming together to do what they do best. What's the plot... is there even a plot? Who knows. The audience knew what they were there for when they sat down to watch this film, and it wasn't for a nuanced plot and deep characters. By far the most memorable dust-up in the movie comes towa...

    So as mentioned earlier in the article, protagonist Kham just wants to get his damn elephant back. Unfortunately, by the time he makes his way to where it is, the poor beast has been killed, and its bones put on display. Naturally, Kham is distraught by this, and his screams of anguish are heart-rending. Then some foolish goon stabs Kham, who snaps...

    Ong-Bak is the film that put Tony Jaa on the map, so of course, the top spot on this list is going to be that film's best fight. On a quest to recover the head of his villages beloved Buddha statue, hero Ting finds himself in an underground fight club. Though initially reluctant to get involved, he eventually steps in to protect a civilian, and tha...

    • Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior (2003) >IMDB Rating: 7.1. >Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 85% The serene village life is disrupted when a sacred statue’s head is stolen, propelling Tony Jaa’s character, Ting, into a whirlwind adventure.
    • The Protector (2005) >IMDB Rating: 7. >Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 53% This film takes the audience on a whirlwind journey from the tranquil jungles of Thailand to the bustling streets of Sydney.
    • Ong-Bak 2: The Beginning (2008) >IMDB Rating: 6.2. >Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 49% A young Thai boxer delves into the profound inner meanings of martial arts.
    • SPL II: A Time for Consequences (2015) >IMDB Rating: 6.7. >Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 100% Kit (Wu Jing), a drug addict, and a prison security guard named Tony Jaa find themselves ensnared in a sinister black market organ theft organization.
  4. Oct 23, 2009 · Oct 23, 2009. Image via Complex Original. Growing up imitating actions greats Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan, Tony Jaa practiced his destiny for countless hours in his father's rice paddy, using the...

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  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tony_JaaTony Jaa - Wikipedia

    One scene in the film involved fighting with another actor while his own trousers were on fire. "I actually got burned," he said in a 2005 interview. "I really had to concentrate because once my pants were on fire the flames spread upwards very fast and burnt my eyebrows, my eyelashes and my nose.