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Bangkok Dangerous
This story presents a model of the powerful events offered by an uncompromising killer Joe (Nicolas Cage). It seems that things will be catastrophic when Joe is in Thailand to complete a series of contract killings of a criminal named Surat (Neratesi Kalgaruk). It turns out that the turn is quite different when it violates the atmosphere of his personal law at those critical moments because he falls for a local woman.
23 January 1967, London, England, UK
October 14, 2012
At six foot plus, with his hair-plug mullet and his ice-white teeth, Cage sticks out like a sore thumb among the tiny Thai citizens, making for the most conspicuous hitman since Agent 47 rocked the bald head 'n' barcode combination.
December 17, 2009
Between all the dates and dinners, Bangkok almost ends up being as less thriller and more travelogue; by the hour mark, there are literally more gulps than gunshots.
September 08, 2008
Just another cycle of bombast and boredom.
November 08, 2008
o Nicolas Cage na periferei tis ektos eleghoy sapoynoperikes toy moytes kai ti geloia malloyra toy, se ena pompodi poiitikistiko ahtarma, poy bromaei ap' opoy ki an ton piaseis
October 15, 2012
A promising film about a hit man that ultimately gets wacked because its star isn't suited for the role at all.
November 20, 2008
A by-the-numbers retread that's ill-conceived as an action vehicle for Cage.
October 18, 2008
Tediously monotonous.
March 23, 2010
This has the look of a cheap quickie foreign film, not unlike a Hong Kong action film.
September 08, 2008
Awatchable, but dull action flick with not enough body count to satisfy the average mixed martial arts fanboy.
September 11, 2008
Cage is believable as the brooding lone-wolf gunman, but the "hit man screwing himself by growing a conscience on his final kill" ploy needs to be put down for good.
December 08, 2008
While the film includes several exciting, creatively shot action scenes, the drama is otherwise so shopworn that the violent climax is a relief.
September 10, 2008
This is as stale as Tuesday's Phad Thai, from its exhausted mythos of the surgically efficient, omnipotent hit man to the training scenes in which Joe explains the trade to the new guy, to the inevitable betrayals of the third act.

