Sky on Fire (2016)

  • Year: 2016
  • Released: 02 Dec 2016
  • Country: China, Hong Kong
  • Adwords: N/A
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6157600/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/sky_on_fire
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: Cantonese, Mandarin
  • MPA Rating: Not Rated
  • Genre: Action, Crime, Thriller
  • Runtime: 99 min
  • Writer: Hiroshi Fukazawa, Ringo Lam, Shiqi Shen
  • Director: Ringo Lam
  • Cast: Daniel Wu, Ruoyun Zhang, Jingchu Zhang
  • Keywords: security guard,
4.5/10
45/100
45% – Critics
15% – Audience

Sky on Fire Photos

Sky on Fire Torrents Download

720pbluray916.31 MBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:A6189770BC4841EE9617AEEC16E4A5BAE37AAC4B
1080pbluray1.84 GBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:B7D469144571E53C3C3BBABA022EA22A02CC2309

Sky on Fire Subtitles Download

Arabicsubtitle sky on fire 2016 720p BluRay
Arabicsubtitle Sky on fire 2016 720p BluRay
Arabicsubtitle Sky on Fire 2016 720p BluRay
Englishsubtitle SkyOnFire.brrip.2016.1080p
Englishsubtitle Sky.on.Fire.2016.CHINESE.1080p.BluRay.x264.DD5.1-FGT
Englishsubtitle Sky on Fire 2016 720p BluRay
Farsi/Persiansubtitle Sky on Fire 2016.ALL.BluRay
Sky on Fire 2016.1080p.BluRay
Sky on Fire 2016.720p.BluRay
Malaysubtitle Sky on Fire (2016) BluRay 720p 800MB Goody to
Vietnamesesubtitle SkyOnFire2016BluRay720pDD5.1×264-FCINE
Vietnamesesubtitle Sky on Fire 2016 1080p BluRay DD5.1 x264-CHD

Sky on Fire Movie Reviews

A bland and disjointed mess

Ringo Lam’s swansong is this disappointing action thriller starring the one and only Daniel Wu, and both star and director deserve better material. Wu plays the head of security for some big pharmaceutical company in China, but there’s a conspiracy surrounding cancer-curing stem cells and before long various interested parties are shooting up a storm. I really wanted to like this film but sadly it feels much more like a mainland China movie than a Hong Kong one, if you know what I mean. Lam’s direction is incredibly disjointed and the big cast doesn’t help lessen the confusion. There are a few fun vehicular chases and at least one good fight scene, but the rest is just a bland and disjointed mess.

More like a Ringo Lam-e film

There are few things as good as a great Hong Kong or Chinese action movie, so I was pretty pumped when I sat down to watch this one, especially since it was directed by the legendary Ringo Lam, who has directed some great action movies in the past. However, the end results are a real letdown, so much so that it’s hard to believe Lam directed this. The biggest problem with the movie is that it makes almost no sense at all. I understood that there was a man seeking a cure for his dying sister, but that was about all. The movie moves from scene to scene without giving the audience enough information as to who is who and what everybody wants. The sorry story (which Lam wrote) may have been tolerable had it been for some good action movies, but honestly, the action in the movie isn’t all that special. It’s kind of slow and sluggish, to tell the truth. The only reason why this movie doesn’t get just one star out of ten from me is that it looks pretty good, with expert cinematography and decent production values. But the pretty look won’t stop you from hitting “stop” on your remote before even the first half hour is over.

My Have the Mighty Fallen

Imagine throwing up your lunch, and looking down at the result. That’s basically what Ringo Lam’s 2016 Chinese action flick Sky on Fire is; a collection of random pieces churned together without an ounce of cleverness, the result leaving me speechless – and not in a good way. Though his last foray, Wild City, was arguably sensational, and kept me rooted to the spot, Sky on Fire is an absolute insult to humanity – yes, it is that ridiculous.

Don’t get me wrong…the car chases are magnificently choreographed, with enough staged crashes and smashes to get your heart racing. The musical score, from its sweeping melodies to its beating drums is great, and if the film had any idea what it actually wanted to accomplish, the music would have made it that much more captivating. The computer generated effects are continuous, and though they are *ahem* obviously fake, they sure are pretty.

Daniel Wu stars as Tianbo, the security chief at Sky One, a massive pharmaceutical corporation, where Dr Yu (the lovely Zhang Jingchu) has successfully developed the cure to cancer, using ex-stem cells (no idea what the “ex” means). Unfortunately, the stem cells are stolen, during a not-so-daring robbery by a gang of miscreants led by Ziwan (Zhang Ruo Yun), who spends most of the film looking as though he has no idea what’s going on. Don’t worry Zhang – I feel your pain.

From tracking down the ‘masterminds’ (dripping with sarcasm I’m afraid) of the heist, to uncovering a slew of underwhelming conspiracies, Wu and the rest of the cast spend much of the film holding guns to each other’s heads and shouting, the occasional fisticuffs looking like something ripped out of Team America. You would think with so many guns, someone might actually think to, well, shoot one, something that is rarely the case.

Somehow, Jia (Chang Hsaio-Chaun) and his sister Jane (Amber Kuo), become embroiled in this affair. In the opening of the film, we discover Jane spontaneously, without explanation, has cancer, Jia sacrificing everything to save her. All the while, Yu’s husband, Tang (Yao Fan-Kuang), the owner of the conglomerate, uses his personal lapdog Wolf (Li Haitao) to control the situation, his own agenda in mind.

On paper, this almost sounds sane – it’s the execution that is beyond acceptable. The aforementioned cast are just a small sample of the many faces that appear, not one of them receiving sufficient characterisation for us to understand their motives. We occasionally receive glimpses, in the form of convoluted flashbacks; example, melodramatic scenes of Tianbo’s late wife, though how this relates to the plot, or his character, who seldom seems in mourning, is beyond me. On other occasions, Sky on Fire reveals too much, spoiling the story by revealing the villain halfway through.

Don’t even get me started on the dialogue. One moment it’s pseudoscientific; the next it’s so awkwardly tacky I wouldn’t be surprised if it attracts its own face palm memes; the next, it’s poetic. There is no rhyme or reason for any of it, Zhang Jingchu being perhaps the only actor who can emotionally empower the otherwise shameful script (I genuinely mean this as a compliment). Occasionally, Lam discusses the preciousness of life, an idea which seems in direct contrast with money, these been two of the central themes which very rarely work, click or do anything else.

Finally, Lam’s Sky on Fire has some good action scenes – perhaps he had some spare scenarios lying in his head, and threw them together, hoping for the best (which is a bit like me when I make dinner). Unfortunately, the end result is a punishingly bad film I wouldn’t serve up to my worst enemy; to call it stupid would be an insult to every stupid film out there. Skip this if you can.