Ong-Bak

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
(Redirected from Ong Bak)

The debut film of Tony Jaa, showcasing his "no-strings-attached" (as opposed to Wire Fu) style of Martial Arts Cinema, and brought Muay Boran to the attention of Global Media.

Boonting (Tony Jaa) lives in a small and peaceful village. One day a sacred Buddha statuette called Ong Bak is stolen from the village by an immoral businessman who sells it for exorbitant profits. It soon becomes the task of Boonting to track the thief to Bangkok and reclaim the religious treasure. Along the way, Boonting uses his astonishing athleticism and traditional Muay Thai skills to combat his adversaries.

There is a prequel released, called Ong Bak 2: The Beginning, which is far removed from the modern setting of the first and is essentially a Training Montage, a Roaring Rampage of Revenge, and closes with an considerable drawn out Quirky Miniboss Squad battle, involving Tony Jaa's character, called Tien, squaring off against every single "Ancient" Martial Art, developed in Asia.

Ong Bak 3 concludes Tien's story, and ties both movies with the first.

Tropes used in Ong-Bak include:
  • Badass: Ting, so very very much.
    • The prequel with Tien makes Ting seem like another mook.
  • Bottled Heroic Resolve: The Dragon injected himself with some kind of drug in order to keep fighting the hero during the climactic fight scene, for all the good that did him in the end.
    • In all fairness, The Hero was high as a kite as well. That was the purpose of that piece of wood he bit down on, after all.
  • The Brute: Big Bear
  • Casualty in the Ring: Part of the backstory of Ting's master, which is the reason he commands Ting never to use Muay Thai for anything other than self-defense.
  • Combat Pragmatist: The professional fighter "Mad Dog" was a particularly dramatic example of this, using absolutely everything that came to hand as a weapon, even ripping out electrical wires to attack his opponent.
  • Country Mouse: Ting; they even keep referring to him as "Country Boy".
  • Dance Battler: Ting fights a Funny Afro TKD stylist at one point
  • The Dreaded: Mad Dog. When he came into the ring, the announcer didn't even bother introducing him, he just went "Oh God, Mad Dog!" and ran away.
  • Dynamic Entry: The steroid-popping Dragon ambushes Tony Jaa this way when when the hero was about to go after his boss. To be fair, Tony Jaa is also a grandmaster of this technique.
  • Every Car Is a Pinto: Tri-wheeled, golf cart-like taxis (Tuk Tuks), which explode rather dramatically one by one.
  • Fight Clubbing
  • Genre Shift: The sequel/prequel is a historical Martial Arts Epic.
  • Honor Before Reason
  • How Dare You Die on Me!: Humlae dies and Muay spends her last lines of the movie cursing him for dying.
  • Implacable Man: Ting. And how.
  • Incendiary Exponent: Ting (played by Muay Thai expert Tony Jaa) kicks a mook in the head with his legs on fire. Jaa did his own stunts.
    • He also insisted on doing the take over and over again until he was sure it was right, despite having already suffered burns to his legs from prior takes.
  • Infernal Retaliation: During a fight at a gas station, Ting gets his pants soaked in gasoline from the knee down, before dodging behind some barrels, which are promptly blown up by gunfire. After a few seconds, Tony comes leaping out of the inferno and kicks a couple of guys with his flaming legs.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Humlae
  • Karmic Death: The demise of the crime boss Komtuan possibly epitomizes the concept of karmic death, as he is crushed under the falling head of a giant Buddha statue, which he was trying to remove and sell. You don't get much more karmic than that.
    • In the prequel: Tien slits the throat of his adopted father with his sword, who murdered his actual father by slitting his throat with a sword. He even acknowledges this fact before Tien kills him
  • Man On Fire: Ting kicks a man in the face while his legs are on fire. He then puts them out in a barrel of water. (Note: Tony Jaa did his own stunts. Damn.)
  • Mobstacle Course: Subverted as Tony Jaa, confronted by a crowd, runs across people's heads while the Mooks chasing him have to play the trope straight.
  • One-Man Army: Ting.
    • In Ong Bak 2 we see this demonstrated... Twice...
  • Only a Flesh Wound: The finale of sees Ting get shot in the shoulder with a pistol by the Big Bad at near point-blank range, but remains spry enough to vault off a piece of scenery and deliver dual-downward-knees to The Dragon hard enough to break through the piece of scaffolding they're standing on. Mind you, this is Tony Jaa we're talking about.
    • Ong Bak 2: Tien is cut and slashed a lot in the closing, and yet is able to still dodge 99% of the attacks from his enemies.
  • Redemption Equals Death
    • While this is true for the girl who died because she confessed to wanting to give up coke, this troper is sure he saw Humlae (who he assumed this entry referred to) on the back of an elephant in the end.
    • Also in the prequel. Tien's adopted father, who killed his real father, allows himself to be killed by Tien both to atone for killing his father and to ensure that the rest of his own family is kept safe.
  • Repeat Cut: Used for nearly every impressive stunt in the movie, showing the action from different angles and different speeds. Of course, given the damn impressive nature of the stunts, wouldn't you want to show them off as much as possible?
  • Serrated Blade of Pain: One Mook wields a saw as an Improvised Weapon.
  • Sheet of Glass: Variation. Ting runs through two guys carrying a pair of sheets parallel to each other (and the sidewalk). Ting then smoothly cartwheels between them without breaking stride.
  • Why Don't Ya Just Shoot Him: Averted. The Big Bad of the first film does just shoot Ting. It's a big surprise because by that point Ting has laid waste to so many of the guy's goons that we've forgotten that a gun would be a very quick solution to this problem. The two seem incredibly mismatched and we expect the fight to be over quickly, which it is; just not in the way we expect.