Remo songs mp3.
Director
Todor ChapkanovDirectorBoyka Undisputed 4 Full Movie
Cast
Scott AdkinsYuri BoykaTeodora DuhovnikovaAlmaAlon AboutboulZourabJulian VergovSlavaMartyn FordKoshmarBrahim AchabbakheIgor KazmirPaul ChahidiKirilPetio PetkovDominikValentin GanevWardenVlado MihailovPriestLinks
Download | Quality | Language | Size |
---|---|---|---|
Download | English | 672 MB |
Shared4
In the fourth installment of the fighting franchise, Boyka is shooting for the big leagues when an accidental death in the ring makes him question everything he stands for. When he finds out the wife of the man he accidentally killed is in trouble, Boyka offers to fight in a series of impossible battles to free her from a life of servitude. | |
Genre: | Action |
Release: | 4 May 2017 |
Views: | 73038 |
Directors: | Todor Chapkanov |
Stars: | Scott Adkins, Teodora Duhovnikova, Alon Aboutboul, Julian Vergov, Brahim Achabbakhe, Paul Chahidi, Petio Petkov, Valentin Ganev, Vlado Mihailov, Martyn Ford, Vladimir Kolev, Hristo Petkov, Boris Pankin, Bashar Rahal, Emilien De Falco |
Ratings: 3.94 votes: 222 |
How to Watch? | Turn off the lights | |
|
BDRip/BRRip
- 1
- HD 1080P
- 2
- verystream.com
- 3
- openload.co
- 4
- streamplay.to
- 5
- vidoza.net
- 6
- vivo.sx
- 7
- vivo.sx
- 8
- streamplay.to
- 9
- vidoza.net
- 10
- openload.co
- 11
- openload.co
- 12
- verystream.com
Genres: | Action, |
Categories: | Featured,Latest-HD, |
Release Date: | 22nd September 2016 |
Runtime: | 73 mins |
Languages: | |
Directors: | |
Actors: |
|
Share: |
Storyline: | In the fourth installment of the fighting franchise, Boyka is shooting for the big leagues when an accidental death in the ring makes him question everything he stands for. When he finds out the wife of the man he accidentally killed is in trouble, Boyka offers to fight in a series of impossible battles to free her from a life of servitude.In the fourth installment of the fighting franchise, Boyka is shooting for the big leagues when an accidental death in the ring makes him question everything he stands for.. |
The video keeps buffering or detele? Click here for a different PLAYER.
Download 'Boyka: Undisputed 4 (2016)' in HD Quality
Some hosts have deceptive ads. Look for a small X above the ad to close it, and begin watching.
- Boyka: Undisputed 4 Full Movie Links Free
Cat Related Movies
Related Movies
This (along with part III) isn’t a very good sequel; the story isn’t good and the writing sucks. But we do get MORE ADKINS AS BOYKA, and I’m pretty sure that’s all we really wanted.
Ever since we first met Scott Adkins (Doctor Strange, Ninja: Shadow of a Tear, The Expendables 2, Universal Solder: Day of Reckoning, El Gringo, Assassination Games, Hard Target 2) and his flair for technical stunts and martial arts fight choreography, we’ve wanted to see him in more significant action movie roles. The last several years have been kind to Adkins’ fans, but we all still wanted more of the role that truly made him famous: BOYKA!
After killing a fighter in the ring, Boyka (Scott Adkins) seeks to redeem himself by paying off his dead opponent’s widow’s (Teodora Duhovnikova) debts to a Russian gangster by agreeing to three profitable organized fights.
Director Todor Chapkanov doesn’t have much experience at the helm and it shows. The frame rate makes Boyka look too fast to look credible (Adkins is fast enough on his own) and the photography isn’t exactly top notch. On top of that, the dialogue is terrible and loaded with soap operatic melodrama…and did you know that apparently everyone in the Ukraine and Russia speaks English all the time? Don’t even get me started on this plot. But what this director does right is he gives us more of Adkins as Boyka. And no matter what general filmmaking flaws surround him, Adkins knows how to please his fans!
Adkins continues to deliver his trademark stunts featured in long shots featuring upwards of ten techniques between cuts—the way martial arts should be filmed. His fights are varied and abundant and this highly unrealistic movie builds to when Boyka is forced to fight Koshmar (Martyn Ford), a 6’8” monstrosity of tattoos, muscle and rage. Unfortunately, there’s basically no build-up to this crescendo. It just sort of feels like “the next fight” in a series of fights—maybe with less anticipation than the other fights as well. This “final fight” happens after what Boyka thought was the “final fight” and yet it hardly seems to matter. Again, the writing and direction were not exactly awesome.
Watching Koshmar fight is akin to Nathan Jones in The Protector (2005); a brutal, hulking, smashing menace. But the fight doesn’t last very long and his best trick seems to be being huge. For some reason Boyka defeats this beast faster than any of his other opponents…I guess it’s because he literally had a plane to catch.
In the end, this “movie experience” paled in comparison to Undisputed 2 (2006). Maybe it was the novelty of it all back then. But this movie is still a lot of fun and a satisfying ride for Adkins fans. I love watching him do 540s and 720s and throwing three kicks in one jump. I could watch it all day.
Ever since we first met Scott Adkins (Doctor Strange, Ninja: Shadow of a Tear, The Expendables 2, Universal Solder: Day of Reckoning, El Gringo, Assassination Games, Hard Target 2) and his flair for technical stunts and martial arts fight choreography, we’ve wanted to see him in more significant action movie roles. The last several years have been kind to Adkins’ fans, but we all still wanted more of the role that truly made him famous: BOYKA!
After killing a fighter in the ring, Boyka (Scott Adkins) seeks to redeem himself by paying off his dead opponent’s widow’s (Teodora Duhovnikova) debts to a Russian gangster by agreeing to three profitable organized fights.
Director Todor Chapkanov doesn’t have much experience at the helm and it shows. The frame rate makes Boyka look too fast to look credible (Adkins is fast enough on his own) and the photography isn’t exactly top notch. On top of that, the dialogue is terrible and loaded with soap operatic melodrama…and did you know that apparently everyone in the Ukraine and Russia speaks English all the time? Don’t even get me started on this plot. But what this director does right is he gives us more of Adkins as Boyka. And no matter what general filmmaking flaws surround him, Adkins knows how to please his fans!
Adkins continues to deliver his trademark stunts featured in long shots featuring upwards of ten techniques between cuts—the way martial arts should be filmed. His fights are varied and abundant and this highly unrealistic movie builds to when Boyka is forced to fight Koshmar (Martyn Ford), a 6’8” monstrosity of tattoos, muscle and rage. Unfortunately, there’s basically no build-up to this crescendo. It just sort of feels like “the next fight” in a series of fights—maybe with less anticipation than the other fights as well. This “final fight” happens after what Boyka thought was the “final fight” and yet it hardly seems to matter. Again, the writing and direction were not exactly awesome.
Watching Koshmar fight is akin to Nathan Jones in The Protector (2005); a brutal, hulking, smashing menace. But the fight doesn’t last very long and his best trick seems to be being huge. For some reason Boyka defeats this beast faster than any of his other opponents…I guess it’s because he literally had a plane to catch.
In the end, this “movie experience” paled in comparison to Undisputed 2 (2006). Maybe it was the novelty of it all back then. But this movie is still a lot of fun and a satisfying ride for Adkins fans. I love watching him do 540s and 720s and throwing three kicks in one jump. I could watch it all day.