‘Raid’ Star Iko Uwais Joins ‘Beyond Skyline’ (EXCLUSIVE)

Iko Uwais will co-star opposite Frank Grillo in “Beyond Skyline,” a spinoff of the 2010 alien invasion adventure “Skyline.” Uwais is best known for headlining “The Raid” films and for co-starring opposite Keanu Reeves in “Man of Tai Chi.” He will play the leader of an underground resistance that forms after aliens touch down on earth. Grillo plays a father looking for his abducted child. Uwais will be joined in “Beyond Skyline” by Yayan Ruhian, his co-star in “The Raid” franchise and the upcoming “The Night Comes for Us.” The pair will also act as fight choreographers on the film — the dazzling hand-to-hand combat sequences in “The Raid” films are a testament to their skills in that department. Liam O’Donnell will direct the film, in addition to writing it, while Greg and Colin Strause (the directors of the original “Skyline”) will produce along with Matthew Chausse and Mike Wiluan. Producer Greg Strause said he tapped the Uwais and Ruhian because, “We’re showcasing a new kind of alien combat, so who better to collaborate with than the most innovative fight team in the world?”  

AFM: Spotlight brings ‘The Sound’ to market

EXCLUSIVE: International sales launched on Rose McGowan horror. Spotlight Pictures has bolstered its AFM sales slate with supernatural horror The Sound starring actress and women’s rights activist Rose McGowan. The company launches international sales on the story of a writer on paranormal matters who believes low frequency tactile sound is the cause for reported ghost sightings in an abandoned subway station. To debunk the sightings, she breaks into the station to record evidence and discovers a connection to the paranormal world. Christopher Lloyd and Michael Eklund also star in The Sound, and Jenna Mattison wrote and directed. North Hollywood Films is producing the film, which is in post-production, and Michele Weisler serves as executive producer alongside Cody Hackman of North Hollywood Films. Spotlight Pictures vice-president Ryan McCombs negotiated the deal with Hackman.

How Gridlocked got North Hollywood Films moving

The action feature was released on all digital platforms across North America this week, as well as making its international premiere in Shanghai. With its action feature Gridlocked, Toronto-based prodco North Hollywood Films (formerly Hackybox Pictures) is looking to establish itself as a Canadian indie producer of films high on commercial appeal, global marketability and star power. Released earlier this week on Blu-ray, DVD, and VOD via Mongrel Media in Canada and Magnolia Pictures in the U.S., Gridlocked is directed by Allan Ungar (Tapped Out) and produced by Bruno Marino and Geoff Hart. The Toronto-shot film stars Dominic Purcell (Prison Break), Stephen Lang (Avatar), Cody Hackman (Tapped Out), Danny Glover (Lethal Weapon), Canadian Trish Stratus, Vinnie Jones and Saul Rubinek. The film also secured a global deal with Netflix, where it will debut later this summer. Co-written by Ungar and Rob Robol, the film was shot in 2014 and financed through Hackybox Pictures. Now under a new banner, North Hollywood president Cody Hackman said he wants Gridlocked to separate the company from the current crop of Canadian production outfits. “We’re trying to break the Canadian mould. Our business model is very commercial, and we want to keep it like that,” Hackman told Playback Daily. Gridlocked – which made its world premiere at Fantastic Fest in Austin, TX and this past weekend screened at the Shanghai International Film Festival – sees Purcell playing a SWAT leader who takes a hard-living movie star (played by Hackman) on a ride-along. However, when a police facility comes under attack from mercenaries, the pair must work together to rescue those trapped inside. The film is intended to appeal to two separate demographics, said writer/directer Ungar. The first is an 18-to-25 year-old audience, as Hackman’s character is based loosely on Justin Bieber. The second target demo, said Ungar, is those who grew up watching ’80s and ’90s action movies such as Lethal Weapon and Die Hard. “From the business aspect we have to cater to the younger demo who watch these movies, but at the same time the film is also paying tribute to a very specific era – I think an older audience will also appreciate the tongue-in-cheek aspect,” Ungar added. The throwback feel of the film is also a reason the filmmakers were able to attach many of the cast members, added Ungar. “I think the stars saw that twinkle of Lethal Weapon in the script.” Cuba Gooding Jr. was initially attached to play the lead before he was replaced by Purcell. Following Gridlocked, North Hollywood plans to begin rolling out a slate of between three and five films per year, in budgets ranging from $3 million to $45 million. The first of these, Ugly Love, will shoot in Toronto and San Francisco this fall. The project is an adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s novel of the same name. The next, Liberty Crossing, will be in a drastically higher budget range, said Ungar and Hackman in a joint interview, with the budget for the project falling somewhere in the $40-million range.

Gridlocked (2016) Cinémasculin

Résumé :  David Handrix, un ancien agent du SWAT forcé de faire du baby-sitting avec un acteur reconnu pour ses frasques médiatiques, doit mettre fin à leur escapade lorsque le centre d’entraînement, dans lequel les deux hommes se trouvent, est pris d’assaut par une équipe de mercenaires. Critique :  En toute franchise, malgré le casting assez important de Gridlocked, je suis entré dans ce long-métrage avec aucunes attentes et peu d’espoirs. Non pas que je pensais être devant un mauvais divertissement, mais avec la quantité de films d’action sortant directement en DVD, il est assez rare de tomber sur un bon petit film indépendant pouvant égaler les super-productions hollywoodiennes. Et bien, croyez-le ou non, Gridlocked est possiblement à ce jour, l’un des meilleurs films d’action canadiens jamais produits… Brody Walker est un jeune acteur prometteur qui ruine sa carrière avec des frasques diverses impliquant sa consommation d’alcool, de drogues et sa vie nocturne. Sa dernière erreur le force à faire des travaux communautaires avec les forces de l’ordre de la ville de New York. David Hendrix, un membre du SWAT sur la touche après une blessure par balle, est forcé contre son gré de trainer Walker avec lui durant ses arrestations et ses patrouilles en voiture. Un soir, tandis qu’il visite ses compagnons de SWAT avec Walker, Hendrix se retrouve coincé au beau milieu d’un siège orchestré par des policiers corrompus voulant récupérer une importante somme d’argent cachée aux yeux de tous par le gouvernement des États-Unis… Dans les faits, Gridlocked se veut être la version canadienne d’Assault on Precinct 13, un classique américain qui va célébrer son quarantième anniversaire cet automne. Il est inutile de nier cette réalité, car dès les premières minutes nous pouvons clairement sentir l’influence du long-métrage de John Carpenter. Plus encore, Gridlocked se veut être un hommage aux vieux films d’action des années 70 et 80, avec de nombreuses phrases cultes (Dont la célèbre phrase «I am too old for this shit.».), une réalisation lente et ordonnée, sans caméra branlante ou montage vomitif, et avec une intrigue simple mais élaborée. Mais le sentiment de nostalgie n’est pas le moteur de Gridlocked, car la dynamique composée du duo de personnages principaux obtient ce titre. Ce duo, assez classique, fonctionne sur le principe de l’homme sérieux très compétent à son métier qui est obligé d’être avec le petit comique de service. Et contrairement à des films comme Rush Hour ou Shanghai Noon, la moitié comique n’est pas seulement là pour faire des blagues ou pour contrarier le personnage principal. Nous avons ici deux véritables personnes qui ne sont pas que des piles de clichés tentant en vain de créer des protagonistes captivants. Avec Gridlocked, nous sommes en face d’un duo réaliste et crédible qu’il serait, en théorie, possible de croiser dans votre poste de police de quartier. Évidement l’humour du film aide beaucoup à nous donner cette impression avec plusieurs bons gags, utiles à l’histoire et qui ne semblent aucunement être forcés, surtout lorsque Gridlocked tente de faire le parallèle entre la vie d’une vedette d’Hollywood et d’un policier de New York. Par-contre, la simplicité et le manque d’ambition de Gridlocked seront ses pires défauts dans la mesure où aucun des personnages, incluant nos deux héros, n’a de développement réel. Si l’on ne fait que regarder l’équipe du SWAT dont faisait partie Hendrix, nous avons la recrue, la tête enflée et la «lesbienne» de service; et à aucun moment, Gridlocked fait le moindre effort pour tenter d’étoffer ces brèves descriptions ou pour démontrer que ces personnes ne sont pas que des clichés ambulants. La structure narrative souffre également du même problème alors que toute l’intrigue du film peut se résumer en une simple phrase : Un policier est forcé de faire équipe avec un emmerdeur et ils se retrouvent coincés dans un braquage perpétré par une équipe de mercenaires et de policiers. À aucun moment le film se force à explorer cette prémisse ou à y ajouter de la substance, et sur le long-terme, cela finit par apporter de nombreuses incohérences et drôleries qui sont difficiles à excuser, même pour un divertissement bourrin. Cela peut même perturber notre visionnement comme lors d’un moment où les bandits empoisonnent nos héros en lâchant du poison dans le système d’aération (Ne nous demandez pas comment…) et que dans une même pièce, il se trouve deux personnes, et que l’une d’entre-elle ne semble être aucunement affectée par ledit poison… Certes il faut fermer notre cerveau pour apprécier Gridlocked, mais nous pouvons au moins espérer un peu plus de logique de la part des scénaristes. Sinon, il nous faut également noter le nombre impressionnant de jurons dans les dialogues du film, alors que les personnages parlent comme de vulgaires gamins qui tente d’être «cools» en parlant comme des «adultes»… À la longue, cela devient même perturbant puisque nous avons l’impression qu’aucun des personnages ne parle réellement. Sur le plan technique, Gridlocked est de loin supérieur aux multiples navets se trouvant dans les bacs à DVD de ce monde. Même que nous pouvons sentir une véritable maîtrise technique par Allan Ungar (Tapped Out), qui se révèle être un excellent réalisateur capable de grandes choses avec peu de moyens. Car, malgré un budget assez limité, Ungar est parvenu à créer quelque chose de visuellement spectaculaire, avec beaucoup d’emphase sur l’action, sur les décors et autres éléments physiques, et sur l’ambiance. Il suffit de visionner la séquence d’introduction du vilain de l’histoire, qui débarque avec ses hommes chez un pauvre couple de vieillards, pour comprendre ce fait, alors qu’Ungar parvient à définir complètement ce personnage avec peu de mots, une caméra intelligence et un bon éclairage nocturne. Même les scènes d’action profitent de la compétence d’Ungar avec des fusillades brillantes et des scènes de combats plutôt réussies. La séquence d’introduction du personnage de Dominic Purcell est possiblement l’une des meilleures scènes d’action de l’acteur qui récidive en fin de parcours avec un affrontement court mais mémorable avec Vinnie Jones. De plus, nous pouvons sentir une volonté claire d’utiliser des effets spéciaux pratiques tant dans les explosions que dans les effusions de sang. À de nombreux moments, Gridlocked se surpasse même en repoussant les limites du cinéma d’action typique; pensons notamment à une scène de combat où un personnage voit ses joues se faire transpercer par une balle et que son adversaire rentre ses doigts et joue avec les plaies ouvertes du fameux personnage. Sinon, nous ne pouvons pas passer à côté de la trame sonore de Jacob Shea, qui signe ici sa deuxième véritable bande sonore en carrière. Cet homme a longtemps travaillé avec les meilleurs du cinéma hollywoodiens (The Dark Knight, Iron Man, la franchise Pirates of the Caribbean) et cela s’entend à chaque minute. Shea est parvenu à créer une musicalité assez spectaculaire qui apporte beaucoup de rythme et d’enthousiasme au long-métrage, parvenant même à faire passer Gridlocked pour un blockbuster estival à certains moments… Même en n’offrant pas la meilleure performance de sa carrière, Dominic Purcell (Prison Break) a une bonne présence à l’écran et il a une chimie contagieuse avec sa co-vedette, Cody Hackman (Tapped Out), un champion du monde d’arts martiaux qui n’utilise aucunement ses aptitudes physiques au profit d’un rôle plus comique. Pour sa part, Stephen Lang (Avatar) offre un antagoniste respectable, avec un jeu d’acteur rappelant grandement celui de Gabriel Bryne dans le véritable remake d’Assault on Precinct 13. Danny Glover (Lethal Weapon) est également de la partie avec un rôle secondaire important faisant honneur à la longue carrière de l’acteur américain. Ceci étant dit, la principale erreur de ce casting repose sur les épaules de Trish Stratus (Ancienne lutteuse de la WWE), dont le mauvais jeu d’actrice contraste royalement avec le reste de cette production. Notons finalement que Vinnie Jones (Snatch.), Saul Rubinek (Barney’s Version)Richard Gunn (Angel) et que l’acteur québécois Romano Orzari (Les Jeunes Loups) ont aussi des rôles secondaires dans ce film. Même si il ne risque pas de gagner de prix, Gridlocked parvient à se servir de la prémisse d’Assault on Precinct 13 pour proposer un spectacle surprenant et spectaculaire qui n’est pas exempt de défauts, comme le côté simplet de l’œuvre qui risque de déranger de nombreux spectateurs. Néanmoins, nous ressortons du film en étant incroyablement diverti, alors que les deux heures du long-métrage défilent à vive allure. Gridlocked est possiblement le meilleur long-métrage de la carrière de Dominic Purcell, et il est très certainement le meilleur film cinéma d’action canadien, depuis la belle époque de Bon Cop, Bad Cop

Interview: ‘Gridlocked’ Villain Stephen Lang Talks Cable Via Deadpool 2, Avatar Sequels And One Long Career In Film

When speaking about both quality and longevity in an acting career, nobody is more prevalent than Stephen Lang.  A stage actor in his early years, Lang came from strong theatrical training and as a result has had one of the most interesting, long and diverse careers ever.  Known for playing the consummate tough guy (see “Avatar” folks!) as well as more weasel-like figures (his Freddy Lounds in “Manhunter” is the epitome of paparazzi sleaze!), Lang’s career has deservedly stretched for decades and shows no signs of stopping.  His latest flick entitled “Gridlocked” (out on DVD/Blu-ray and Digital HD June 14 from Magnolia Home Entertainment) sees Lang playing a vicious villain with military training named Korver who gives Dominic Purcell’s hard-nosed cop a run for his money.  We were utterly humbled by the chance to talk to Lang – one of our acting heroes – all about his new film, but the magic did not stop there.  What follows is a massive and comprehensive career interview that runs the gamut of Lang’s colorful and amazing career.  From “Band of the Hand” to “Babe Ruth,” from Michael Mann to Sidney Lumet (plus we get into “Band of Robbers” and “Don’t Breathe” that both feature standout Lang performances this year too!) we grilled the gracious Lang for three-quarters of an hour (sorry Stephen!) to get the skinny on anything and everything Lang related.  (Plus as a bonus scoop hounds get the skinny on Lang possibly playing Cable in “Deadpool 2” and info on the “Avatar” sequels – you’re welcome!)  In what is safe to say our all-time favorite interview ever we are so proud and excited to share with you, our colossal chat with one of the legends in acting and a man who has created cool characters we just adore, here’s the great….
  STEPHEN LANG Having played so many villains over the years what is the secret to portraying a memorable one and how does Korver in “Gridlocked” fit into that mold? Stephen Lang: I don’t know that there’s any one secret to it.  You just have to first of all jettison the idea that you’re the villain and pursue your own agenda with your own sense of purpose and righteous integrity – whatever the hell it is.  It’s hard to play bad.  You have to approach them as if they are as human as you and I.  I mean it’s kind of a bullshit answer (laughs) because when I read a script I can tell as well as anybody else who the good guy and the bad guy is, you know?  But most bad guys don’t conceive of themselves as bad guys I think.   You have some serious fight time with Dominic Purcell in the film – how much of that is you and how do you maintain your shape as you get older? SL: Well, that’s an undying question my boy (laughs) because you just do it.  It’s a physical role and an awful lot of what I get called upon to do is physical stuff.  I mean fighting with Dom was great.  He’s a terrific pro and he’s not out to prove anything – we’re just trying to get the job done correctly.  So knowing that what you’re going to do is going to be physically demanding in any case you just go at it as safely and energetically as you possibly can.  It’s like dancing – it’s a successful fight if it looks absolutely devastating.  As the years go on I just keep changing my workout regiment according to what’s needed and what I’m doing, but also according to what feels right for myself.  So back in the day, there was a tremendous amount of weight and strength training, now I do an awful lot of flexibility training as well – so basically a lot of yoga. I love the angle of the film that’s a throwback to one of your previous films “The Hard Way” with an actor getting caught up in the mix of real life action – what is it about smarmy actors in peril that we love to watch? SL: When I read the movie I was a bit like, ‘Yo, Allan (Ungar, Director), this feels like…’ and he said, “Yeah, I know. It’s a take on that!’  And I think that throughout the film there are a number of tips of the hat to various action films.  He’s a really smart director and made a really good film.  I think the intention here was to take something that really does, just by its very nature kind of a B-movie, almost epitomize the genre.  I don’t know what it is about actors, but we do love the concept that actors will relish the idea of really getting into these situations.  Every actor wants to be a cop, every actor wants to do adventurous or dangerous stuff and this guy is totally unequipped for it.  (Laughs) And Dominic is a very good antagonist to Cody just because he is so no-nonsense to me – you look at him and he looks like a pillar.   Past work – I adore and grew up with the film “Band of the Hand” and especially dug your character of Joe Tegra who was fascinating and layered.  How much of the mindset of that character did you bring to it vs. what was on the page? SL: Wow – that’s a long time ago.  I was actually filming something else for Michael Mann simultaneously at the same time.  There was some depth to that character as I recall.  I worked closely with Paul Michael Glaser who was the director on that and Michael Mann certainly had a lot of input into the character.  We just wanted to make a guy who was solid and righteous and was dealing with his own pain in a real positive way and who felt the responsibility to make these kids learn what it means to take responsibility for their own lives.  To teach them to survive and to take the native skills they had and turn them towards a public and private good.  As far as I can recall – remember that movie is thirty years ago now.  But he was a good character.  It always amazes me that there’s a certain segment of people that come up to me and talk about “Band of the Hand” and I have a feeling that it’s one of those movies that hit them at just a particular time in their youth. Definitely – for me yes! SL: We all have movies like that.  It just kind of spoke to them – the alienation of these kids, the adventure of the whole thing and becoming part of a unit, part of a team was appealing to young people of a certain age.  I had movies like that when I was a kid.

New Canadian action film Gridlocked releases in North America Tuesday

Gridlocked, a new Canadian action-drama from London-based producer and actor Cody Hackman, will be available on all major platforms and in retail stores across North America on June 14. Hackman stars alongside Dominic Purcell (Prison Break), Stephen Lang (Avatar), former WWE superstar Trish Stratus, Danny Glover (Lethal Weapon) and Vinnie Jones (Snatch) in the film, which is being released by Magnolia Pictures in the US and Mongrel Media in Canada. Co-written and directed by Toronto’s Allan Ungar (his second collaboration with Hackman), the throwback buddy cop movie is about a former SWAT leader (Purcell) who gets saddled with an obnoxious, hard-partying movie star (Hackman) after the latter’s legal troubles require him to perform community service. Their ride-along takes a serious turn, though, when they find themselves trapped in a police training facility under siege by a team of mercenaries. Filmed primarily in Toronto with a few shots from London, Gridlocked is in some ways an ode to the action movie boom of the eighties and nineties, a genre Hackman said he feels particularly comfortable in as an actor and a producer. “Because of my martial arts background, action movies are really making sense to me,” said Hackman, who recently rebranded his production company as North Hollywood Films and is following up his first release, the mixed martial arts-inspired Tapped. “The action genre, as a producer, … it’s still the number one global selling genre. Everyone understands action. They make the most money because they’re universal.” Hackman will be overseas in China when the film lands in North America. Gridlocked is being screened in Shanghai during Jackie Chan Action Movie Week, the only Canadian selection in its category, Hackman said. “We’re premiering next to Sicario and some huge releases, so we’re really, really hoping for a theatrical release in China because action movies are their thing,” Hackman said. Gridlocked has already had some success in the action genre festival scene. The film won the Best Action award at the 2015 Toronto After Dark Film Festival and screened at Fantastic Fest in Austin Texas, where Hackman and his colleagues were able to negotiate the film’s distribution deals. Although there are no plans for a theatrical release near London, Hackman said his company also has a global deal with Netflix to add Gridlocked to the popular movie streaming service closer to the end of summer. CMontanini@postmedia.com Twitter: @LondonerChris

Frank Grillo is Tough-as-Nails In This Latest ‘Beyond Skyline’ Image

From cowering in fear to tough as nails, here’s a brand new look at The Purge: Anarchy‘s Frank Grillo in Beyond Skyline, the sequel to Colin and Greg Strause’s Skyline that’s directed this time by Liam O’Donnell, who worked on some effects in Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem and Iron Man 2. He co-wrote the screenplay with Joshua Cordes. The duo wrote the first film, too.

Grillo stars in the film as a detective who embarks on a relentless pursuit to free his son from a nightmarish alien warship.

The full cast includes Frank Grillo, Bojana Novakovic (Drag Me to Hell, Devil), Jonny Weston (Under the Bed, Project Almanac), Iko Uwais, Callan Mulvey, Antonio Fargas, Pamelyn Chee, Yayan Ruhian, Jacob Vargas, Valentine Payen, Betty Gabriel, Jack Chausse, and Kevin O’Donnell.

The sequel’s storyline allegedly takes place at the same time the first one did.

Hydraulx Entertainment is behind Beyond Skyline, and do some seriously badass effects work.

Magnet Releasing, Mongrel Media Take Dominic Purcell’s ‘Gridlocked’ for North America

The action thriller, directed by Allan Ungar, also features Danny Glover and former WWE star Trish Stratus. XYZ Films has closed North American deals for the Dominic Purcell-starrer Gridlocked,with Magnolia’s Magnet Releasing taking the action thriller for the U.S. market, and Mongrel Media acquiring the Canadian rights. The movie’s ensemble cast includes Lethal Weapon alum Danny Glover, former WWE star Trish Stratus, Cody Hackman, Richard Gunn, Vinnie Jones and Stephen Lang. Gridlocked follows a former SWAT leader (Purcell) who is being shadowed by an arrogant movie star, played by Hackman. Hackman’s Hackybox Pictures financed the under-siege buddy cop feature, which is based on a script by Ungar and Rob Robol. The deal for the film was made after a world premiere at Fantastic Fest in Austin. Gridlocked is produced by Bruno Marino. The Canadian deal was negotiated by Mongrel’s Andrew Frank, with Nate Bolotin of XYZ Films representing the filmmakers.

Fantastic Fest 2015 Review: GRIDLOCKED Kicks Ass And Takes No Prisoners

If you’re looking for a movie with hyper-violence, well-choreographed ass kickings, and a lot of bloodshed, Gridlocked is your Huckleberry. Not to be confused with the great 1997 crime film Gridlock’d starring Tim Roth and the late Tupac Shakur, Gridlocked is a hepped up Assault on Precinct 13 with bullets calling all the shots. In Gridlocked, Dominic Purcell (Prison Break) plays the hard-as-nails SWAT leader David Hendrix. He’s the guy you send into an apartment packed with guns and goons ready to fire them. He’s the guy who walks out of that situation with a lot of blood on his hands, and none of it is his own. (Move over Liam Neeson, there’s a new bad motherfucker in town with a particular set of skills.) Today is a special day for David — he gets to carry dead weight around, a former child actor-turned-trainwreck Brody Walker (Cody Hackman), who was just busted for another DWI and assaulting a cameraman, who’s no doubt a replica of one of those obnoxious, invasive, and repulsive TMZ camera guys who love to taunt celebrities. Walker is a spoiled brat with redeeming qualities inside him, somewhere, just too wrapped in the golden celebrity lifestyle and needs a good reality check. To avoid jail time, he is ordered to ride around with a cop as community service, and that cop, much to his disapproval and irritation, is David. When they stop by a training facility, their budding romance is put on hold when a team of mercenaries take over looking for something called a lot of money. They lock down the facility and plan to take out everyone inside it and get what they came for. Mayhem ensues. Gridlocked roams familiar territory. It’s undoubtedly influenced by John Carpenter’s Assault on Precinct 13, Martin Brest’s Midnight Run, and Walter Hill’s 48 Hrs. Paying homage to renowned films like this will never be a wrong move. The motive is simple but always complicated and a riot to watch: the hero must keep safe and put up with the zero, and this always makes for satisfying entertainment. Gridlocked is an energetic beast and doesn’t waste any time with the mayhem. The first fight scene is one of the best to come along in a while. The film has enough bone-crunching fight scenes and bullets to the head to satisfy any movie buff. If David Hendrix isn’t going to survive this night, he’s made it clear he’s going down in a blaze of glory. Something else to note: it’s also at times amusing, something a lot of action movies have forgotten about these days. Gridlocked is Allan Ungar’s sophomore feature and he shows promise as an action director. He is someone to keep on your radar. For Gridlocked, Ungar is a triple threat, serving as director, co-writer, and editor. So this film is all his vision. Since anyone with an admiration of action films will quickly pick up all the films Ungar is paying tribute to, he ups the chaos and carnage to keep the entertainment flowing, and audience satisfied. Gridlocked has an excellent cast alongside the aforementioned: Danny Glover (who finally looks too old for this shit), former WWE superstar-turned-actor Trish Stratus, and Stephen Lang (Avatar) as, appropriately, the bad guy. Vinnie Jones (Guy Ritchie’s Snatch and Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels) shows up for a quick hello and blast to the face. Poor guy, he gave up football (or soccer, if you’re American) for acting and could have been the next great loose cannon action hero if he didn’t take every damn movie script that came his way. As a film, Gridlocked is a rollicking blast. It brings the pain and something a lot of action movies are missing these days: fun. It doesn’t take itself too seriously, just wants its audience to sit back, relax, and enjoy the body count. Worked for me.

INTERNATIONAL MMA FILM ‘TAPPED OUT’ ENTERS THE AMERICAN MARKET

Having successfully conquered Canada with a pair of blockbuster world premieres in London, Ontario and Toronto last month and Brazil with a theatrical release this past Friday, Tapped Out is ready to take on the American market. The Karate-Kid-meets-MMA flick, featuring appearances by UFC legends Lyoto Machida and Anderson Silva, will be released Stateside on DVD, VOD, and PPV on Tuesday, May 27. As I wrote when I covered the Toronto premiere, Tapped Out is a slightly cheesy but thoroughly charming contribution to the fledgling MMA film genre, skillfully blending the best of classic combat movies like the aforementioned Karate Kid and Rocky with both the moves and culture of Ultimate Fighting in a way that we haven’t necessarily seen before. It works because the people who made it and the people who starred in it genuinely—and often geekily—care about martial arts of all kinds, and want to do right by the films they grew up with and by the sport the currently enjoy and participate in. I got a taste of this when I sat down to talk to Cody Hackman, the five-time Karate World Champion-turned-actor and writer who plays Michael Shaw, a troubled young karate practitioner who joins an underground MMA league to avenge his dead parents, and Krzysztof Soszynski, UFC Light Heavyweight-turned actor (and behind the scenes UFC guy) who plays the villain before the screening. Both were incredibly thoughtful about the way that MMA is currently portrayed in pop culture, and excited to talk about how their film hopes to improve on that. And they were equally happy to get a little sidetracked about the superiority of Shotokan Karate and their training regimens. Here are some of the highlights of that chat. Fightland: Cody, you co-wrote the screenplay for Tapped Out. Was the story your idea as well? Cody: It was mine and Allan Ungar’s. I added the authenticity of the Karate aspect of it, just different terms and that type of stuff. But we were both inspired by other movies, Karate Kid, Rocky, that type of stuff. And these movies are done over and over and over again, but I think that we did a good job of remaking them in a modern sense. It’s Karate Kid meets MMA. In the cage. What was your background and familiarity with MMA before this project? Cody: I was actually a Karate guy. I share the same style as Lyoto Machida, Shotokan Karate. I was a five-time karate world champion in the same style. Our style’s a lot of sticking and moving, darting in and darting out, punching at different angles.  I’ve had my hand in MMA. I’ve won a couple of fights, I’ve lost a fight. And I love it. I’m a huge, huge fan of the sport. It’s the fastest growing sport in the world. It’s huge right now. So mixing that nineties or eighties Karate Kid stuff with the new stuff… it’s awesome. It is interesting that the fight films you bring up are from more traditional combat sports. I feel like the representation of MMA in film is still in its infancy. Cody: It’s new. It’s new. Krzysztof: Absolutely. There’s only been maybe four films done in that style. But, like Cody said, it is the most popular, probably the fastest growing sport on the planet right now and if you do a Karate Kid movie the old style way, people are not going to be into it as much. They want to see what’s new, what’s out there out there and I think MMA is that new sport where everybody’s kind of transitioning into that. You see a lot more MMA movies nowadays. You see a lot more action movies adding that element to it, whether it’s jiu jitsu, whether it’s wrestling… C: Knees or just, like, different technique. K: Or Muay Thai style. You don’t see just the wrist controls and the Hapkido and Aikido stuff. It’s more and more MMA style now. That’s kind of happening left and right in movies now. We’re transitioning into a new world. How do you feel about the representation of MMA in film right now? K: It’s not too bad. When I did Here Comes The Boom with Kevin James, I was treated really, really well. UFC gave us full support to use their Octagon, to use basically anybody we wanted in the movie, and to make it as authentic as possible. I liked Warrior for the acting part. For the fighting scenes, there was too much professional wrestling going on in my eyes. Never Back Down wasn’t bad. They did a pretty good job of it, as well. I thought we did a really good job with Tapped, really showcasing what mixed martial arts really is. C: The timing of Tapped was really good, because Never Back Down was kind of the first big one and that was kind of a teeny MMA movie, not really serious. And then there’s the comedy that Krzysztof starred in and then Warrior. Those are the three notable MMA movies. There’s a movie called Red Belt, as well. So Tapped Out was a good time, because there’s nothing like it. There hasn’t been Karate Kid meets MMA, except for in real life. Lyoto in real life is the new karate kid because he’s the guy going in there crane kicking people in the face and knocking them out for real. Not a movie. Given your Karate background, Cody, were you particularly excited to have Machida in the film? C: Oh yeah, I’m a huge Lyoto Machida fan. I remember when I would tell people I did MMA and people would be like “Yeah, whatever.”  There’s a difference between Karate and our Karate. Our Karate in real, authentic JK Japanese Karate. It’s where kickboxing and all of that stuff came from. Because what [kickboxing] is is Americanized to not go through the belt rank system. So you can become a decent kick boxer in a few months of really training. But Karate is… it takes years to even understand it because you’ve got to learn the forms, you’ve got to learn the philosophy of all that stuff. How did Machida and Silva get involved in Tapped? C: It was the producers, They sent the script to Lyoto and Anderson and they thought it was kind of funny. Allan did such a good job of writing those guys in the movie. K: They get to be themselves as much as you can. C: They weren’t trying to be actors. K: They were just having fun with each other. They were talking in Portuguese to each other, hanging out having fun, and ad-libbing some of the stuff and it just flowed really nicely. And how did you get involved, Krzysztof? I had a call from Cody. It’s kind of funny, I lived in London, Ontario for about six months with Shawn Tompkins. I was part of Team Tompkins a few years back when I was just getting my foot in the door with mixed martial arts. And Cody showed up at the gym once or twice five or six years ago. He came in and saw who I was and I think we even maybe spoke a couple of words here and there. He remembered me when they were looking for a bad guy. He just saw me in the movie Here Comes The Boom, saw a few pictures of what I look like and gave me a call. C: He doesn’t look like a bad guy at all. No. K: I got a weird call. I’m in California, I got a call from this 519 number… I thought it was a prank at first until he told me that the producer is actually going to call me in about five minutes. I thought “this is some kind of joke!” I got a call from Allan Ungar and the next thing you know, I’m in Toronto, meeting with this guy [Cody] and Nick Bateman. We’re going over our scenes, we’re doing all of this crazy stuff, hanging out just getting to know each other, trying to put that chemistry together and the next thing you know we’re filming in London. C: It was Alan. The director saw a picture of Krzysztof with blood all over him after the Stephan Bonnar fight and he was just like “This is Dominic.” Given that MMA hasn’t completely crossed over into the mainstream pop culture just yet, and many people aren’t completely familiar with the intricacies of the sport, did you feel that explaining it within the context of your film was a challenge at all? C: I’m trying to think back to when I watched Never Back Down. Because MMA was so new then, the were really trying to explain it. like this was this, this is this. And we didn’t really spend time on explaining it too much. The scenes with Anderson, where [Michael Shaw, Hackman’s character] is transitioning… K: That was actually really good, I thought. That was your explanation. C: That was the explanation. But not overdone, where we needed to educate… K: No, no no. It was more about “OK, I have a Karate guy who has no background in MMA whatsoever.” And then you have Anderson Silva and Lyoto Machida giving him ground game instructions on how to do armbar, a triangle. So that was kind of the introduction to the world of MMA for him and hopefully for a few of our audience members who are there for the movie, not because they’re MMA fans, but because they want to see what it’s all about C: One thing I noticed last night was a lot of people were saying that the fights looked gritty and real and… no disrespect to Here Comes The Boom, and I’m a big Kevin James fan, but the fights weren’t as realistic as Tapped’s fights. Not comparing two different movies or anything like that. Here Comes The Boom’s a comedy, anyway. It’s different. The timing of a fight, getting powerbombed or whatever. We were just sticking to the basics. The moves were very basic. Which is what you would do. When it comes down to it, if you want to win a fight, you would do the basics. K: Yeah. We did a lot of that. C: He also beat the shit out of me. K: I tried. C: This guy has major discipline. When we were working out for the movie, I’m sitting there like trying not to eat a cheeseburger, whatever. But this guy was up every day, doing an hour run, all this stuff. I’m on my cellphone like mr. hollywood over here. He was just like “Get off your phone! You’ve got to do this. You’ve got to get in shape.” K: I don’t often get a chance to throw a 145-pound guy around, so this was my chance. C: You fought at, what, 205? K: 205. I didn’t want to fight a pudgy 145-er. I want to fight a guy who’s actually in shape and looks the part. I was 225 pounds for the role, he was 145. It kind of looks off. But if there’s actually some muscle there, then we can actually work with that.