Bangkok Revenge (2011) is a visceral journey through the mechanics of trauma and the cold precision of vengeance. 🇹đź‡đźĄŠ
After witnessing his parents' murder as a child, Manit is left with a bullet in his head—a wound that saves his life but destroys his ability to feel emotion. What follows is the birth of a "soulless" killing machine, trained in the deadliest forms of Muay Thai. Why this 720p BluRay x264 rip hits different: Atonal Action:
Unlike the charismatic flair of Tony Jaa, Jon Foo plays Manit with a haunting, robotic void that makes the bone-crunching choreography feel clinical and terrifying. Gritty Visuals:
The PublicHD/DTS high-def master captures the sweltering, neon-soaked shadows of Bangkok’s underworld, making the 2011 aesthetic feel like a fever dream. The Philosophy of Pain:
It asks a heavy question—can justice truly exist if the person delivering it can’t even feel the satisfaction of the kill? A must-watch for fans of Bangkok Revenge -2011- 720p BluRay DTS x264-PublicHD
who want their martial arts served with a side of psychological noir.
#BangkokRevenge #MartialArtsCinema #MuayThai #ActionMovies #BlurayCollection #Vengeance Should I look up similar gritty martial arts titles or help you find the soundtrack details for this release?
Bangkok Revenge (2011) (originally released as Rebirth) is a martial arts action film directed by Jean-Marc Minéo.
The specific file tag you mentioned (720p BluRay DTS x264-PublicHD) refers to a high-definition digital copy of the film sourced from a physical Blu-ray disc, featuring a DTS multi-channel audio track and compressed using the x264 video codec. 🎬 Movie Overview Director: Jean-Marc Minéo Starring: Jon Foo, Caroline Ducey, Michaël Cohen Genres: Action, Martial Arts, Drama Original Title: Rebirth / Bangkok Renaissance Runtime: ~80 minutes 📝 Plot Summary Bangkok Revenge (2011) is a visceral journey through
At just 10 years old, Manit witnesses the brutal murder of his parents by a group of corrupt police officers. One of the killers attempts to execute Manit by shooting him in the head. He miraculously survives the gunshot, but the physical brain trauma leaves him completely devoid of human emotions (a condition referred to as ataraxia). Bangkok Revenge (2011) - Plot - IMDb
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This rip is a solid representation of the film’s visual style. The 720p resolution handles the gritty, desaturated color palette well—Bangkok’s neon-drenched slums and rain-slicked streets look appropriately grim. The x264 encoding keeps the file size reasonable (typically ~4-5GB) without macro-blocking, even during fast action. However, the original film’s low-budget lighting sometimes results in crushed blacks. The DTS audio is the real star: the thud of elbows, crack of bones, and the intense electronic score by Olivier Lliboutry are punchy and immersive. Dialogue (mostly Thai with some English) is clear. Movie Screenshots (Placeholders for screenshots - click to
While 1080p and 4K are now ubiquitous, a high-bitrate 720p encode remains the "sweet spot" for storage efficiency without sacrificing sharpness.
Directed by Jean-Marc Minéo and starring Jon Foo (who later played Ryu in the Street Fighter: Assassin’s Fist series), Bangkok Revenge tells the tragic story of Manus (Jon Foo). As a child, Manus witnesses the brutal murder of his parents by a masked gang. During the attack, a bullet lodges in his brain, destroying his ability to feel physical pain.
The narrative follows a classic revenge arc: a young boy trained in martial arts by a mysterious mentor (played by the legendary Michael Woods) grows into a one-man army. He returns to the criminal underworld of Bangkok to systematically dismantle those responsible. However, the "bullet in the brain" twist isn't just a gimmick; it allows for fight choreography that pushes beyond human limits. Manus does not flinch, tire from pain, or register damage, leading to bone-shattering, relentless sequences.
Why watch it?