Bartkowiak Review: A Polish Action Film where action sequences are its only strength.




The film, Bartkowiak follows Tomasz Bartkowiak (Jósef Pawlowski), the more youthful of two siblings. He used to be a renowned MMA warrior and was an undefeated hero of the game. After his first harsh misfortune and allegations of injustice, Tomasz resigns and segregates himself from the remainder of the MMA realm. In any case, a family misfortune hauls him back into the world he had made a decent attempt to neglect. What he finds during this, drives him to delve further into his sibling's mishap, just as the misfortune that transformed him. 

Bartkowiak begins with a kick-ass (in a real sense) action scene which is amazing in each sense. The movement is speedy, light, and streams with a specific hostility. In case you are an aficionado of incredible fight batches, this one is certainly something that will attract you. Indeed, the majority of the action sequences are in reality very greatly arranged. They have splendidly shot also. Lighting plays in the camera's approval, and the director did well to choose crude, extremist-style cinematography. 







The plot keeps it basic and doesn't attempt to oversell itself as something it isn't. There's an unfortunate tension point, and things uncover themselves decently fast. In any case, we should remember that the film is an action film and not a thrill ride. Along these lines, truly, no bad things to say. Regardless of making some rush memories of scarcely 100 minutes, Bartkowiak begins hauling along towards the end. Battle sequences, regardless of how very much organized, can just engage you for such a long time. The issue is that: there are excesses of action scenes. Presently, we know, we said we enjoyed them, yet, to be honest, a couple of them were unessential, and all in all to drawn out. 


As far as I might be concerned, the greatest destruction was the acting. The lead had a significant tedious appearance all over. Regardless of whether it was a war group, a delicate second among him and his brother, or when inconvenience struck, there appeared to be a consistent smile stuck across his face, that genuinely weakened the watching experience. Quite possibly the most fascinating character, the Coach, is extraordinary to watch on screen, yet he flutters all through the plot rather indiscreetly. 






Set forth simply, Bartkowiak is a good film to watch. It has a somewhat short run season of an hour and a half, which is wonderful to cover its genuinely straightforward plotline, incredible battle sequences, and obviously, an interesting plot. This isn't to imply that that the film didn't remain imperfect.

Rating:- 2.5/5

Now streaming on Netflix.


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