For fans of Southeast Asian action cinema, few names carry as much weight as Tony Jaa . Following the global shockwave of Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior (2003) and its brutal spiritual successor Tom Yum Goong (2005)—known internationally as The Protector —expectations were sky-high for the 2013 sequel.
It’s a guilty pleasure masterpiece. Tony Jaa still moves like a human weapon, and the insanity—from breaking 50 stuntmen’s arms to the infamous T-Rex fight—is entertainment gold.
However, the true highlight for Sub Indo viewers is the rematch between Tony Jaa and martial artist (playing "The Killer"). Their fight sequence—a brutal, no-holds-barred exchange of Muay Thai, silat, and capoeira—is often cited as one of the most underrated cinematic fights of the 2010s. With Sub Indo, you can turn off your brain during the plot and turn up the volume for the thud of elbows on ribs. The Verdict: Is It Worth Your Time? For the purist: Tom Yum Goong 2 is a downgrade. The CGI is terrible. The story is nonsensical. The director (Prachya Pinkaew) replaces the long, unbroken takes of the original with dizzying, rapid-fire edits.
For fans of Southeast Asian action cinema, few names carry as much weight as Tony Jaa . Following the global shockwave of Ong-Bak: Muay Thai Warrior (2003) and its brutal spiritual successor Tom Yum Goong (2005)—known internationally as The Protector —expectations were sky-high for the 2013 sequel.
It’s a guilty pleasure masterpiece. Tony Jaa still moves like a human weapon, and the insanity—from breaking 50 stuntmen’s arms to the infamous T-Rex fight—is entertainment gold.
However, the true highlight for Sub Indo viewers is the rematch between Tony Jaa and martial artist (playing "The Killer"). Their fight sequence—a brutal, no-holds-barred exchange of Muay Thai, silat, and capoeira—is often cited as one of the most underrated cinematic fights of the 2010s. With Sub Indo, you can turn off your brain during the plot and turn up the volume for the thud of elbows on ribs. The Verdict: Is It Worth Your Time? For the purist: Tom Yum Goong 2 is a downgrade. The CGI is terrible. The story is nonsensical. The director (Prachya Pinkaew) replaces the long, unbroken takes of the original with dizzying, rapid-fire edits.