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Cast : Donnie Yen, Sammo Hung, Lynn Hung Music : Kenji Kawai Cinematography : Poon Hang-sang Producer : Raymond Wong Direction : Wilson Yip Release Date : Feb 03, 2012 |
Guru (English : Ip Man 2; Tamil: குரு) is a dubbed in tamil of 2010 Hong Kong biographical martial arts film loosely based on the life of Ip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art Wing Chun.
Plot
Continuing from where the first film ended, Wing Chun master Ip Man and his family move to Hong Kong in the early 1950s after their escape from Foshan. There, Ip desires to open a school to propagate his art, as well as to make his living, but he has difficulty attracting students due to his lack of reputation in the city. One day, a young man named Wong Leung appears and promptly challenges Ip to a fight, but is easily defeated. Wong leaves humiliated, only to return with some friends to gang up on him. Ip beats them as well. Stunned and impressed by his skills, Wong and his friends become Ip’s first students, bringing more disciples to help the school thrive.
Wong is later caught posting promotional posters for the school by some Hung Gar students. One of them challenges Wong to a fight and loses, but his friends take Wong hostage in revenge and demand a ransom from Ip. Ip goes to the local wet market as directed, but the meeting ends in a confrontation with a growing mob of Hung Ga students. Ip and Wong fight their way outside to meet Jin Shanzhao — the martial artist and former bandit in the first film — who comes to their rescue with his own gang. The students’ master, Hung Chun-nam, arrives to break up the fight. Ip introduces himself, and Hung informs him that before setting up a school, he needs to attend a special fighting ceremony to test his skill. Ip, Wong and Jin are subsequently arrested by Officer Fatso for disturbing the peace but are later released on bail. Hung and Fatso are then shown to be acting as reluctant collectors for the martial arts schools (including Hung’s) as part of a protection racket headed by Superintendent Wallace, a corrupt officer in the Hong Kong police.
Ip attends the ceremony and defeats his first challengers, and then strikes a draw with the last challenger, Hung. Ip is allowed to keep running his school on the condition that he pay the monthly protection fees, but he declines. Hung thus has his students loiter in front of the Wing Chun school and harass anyone interested, causing a street brawl between them and Ip’s disciples. Ip is thus forced to close up and move the school nearer to home. Ip soon confronts Hung and nearly engage in another fight before being interrupted by Hung’s family. During this last encounter, Ip saves Hung’s son from getting accidentally hit by one of the punches, earning his respect from Hung. Ip leaves, and the next day, Hung invites him to a British boxing match he had helped to set up, quietly coming to terms with him.
The boxing competition begins with the various martial arts schools demonstrating their skills. However, the event’s star boxer, Taylor “The Twister” Milos, a psychotic Chinese-hating sociopath, openly insults and attacks the students, causing chaos as the masters try to restore order. Hung accepts Twister’s challenge to a fight so that he can defend his culture. Although Hung has the upper hand at first, he begins to weaken from asthma and is viciously murdered by the British brute with homicidal glee. News of Hung’s death rapidly spreads throughout the enraged Chinese populace, causing a scandal that spurs Wallace to hold a press conference, where he states that Hung’s death was an accident, and Twister announces that he will accept any challenge from the Chinese in order to get rid of his bad reputation, while remorselessly gloating that he is going to murder every Chinese Warrior in Hong Kong to prove the supposed superority of western boxing. Ip Man arrives and accepts the challenge.
As his wife goes into labor, Ip finishes training and begins his fight with Twister. Ip exchanges blows with the boxer, and seems overwhelmed by the westerner at first. He receives a sucker punch from Twister after a bell, and is also told he will be disqualified for using kicks due to the judges changing the rules to help Twister cheat the match. When it seems like the end he changes his strategy, and attacks the boxer’s arms to disable him. This brings the fight to a climactic finish as Ip Man rains blow-after-blow into the knocked-down Twister’s face, with flashbacks of reflecting the latter’s murder of Master Hung. While the Chinese audience cheers, Wallace is arrested by his superiors for corruption, as Fatso had secretly reported him. Ip then gives a speech to the audience, stating that despite the differences between their races and their fighting styles, he wishes for everyone to respect each other. Both the Western and Chinese audience then give him a standing ovation while one of the Westerners walk away unhappy at their failure to defeat China. Twister is publically humiliated by his loss, having failed to defeat Chinese Warrior Culture, and gained a bad reputation as a bloodthristy murderer and a cheating boxer. Ip goes home and reunites with his family, including his newborn second son, Ip Ching.
A final scene shows Ip being introduced to a boy who wishes to study Wing Chun: Bruce Lee. Ip smiles and simply tells the boy to come back when he is older.