Tornado
Genres Action ,Drama ,Thriller
Directors John Maclean
Writer John Maclean
Country United Kingdom
Votes 43
Rating 7.6
IMDBID tt27721490
Runtime 91
Languages English
Release 23 May, 2025
In the rugged terrain of 1790s Britain, Tornado (Koki), a fierce young Japanese woman, faces the ultimate test of survival when her father's puppet Samurai show is ambushed by a notorious gang led by the ruthless Sugarman (Roth) and his cunning son, Little Sugar (Lowden). After witnessing her father's brutal murder, Tornado vows to reclaim her life and seek vengeance by stealing the gang's ill-gotten gold. With her father's Samurai training as her weapon, she embarks on a heart-pounding quest filled with intense action, cunning strategy, and relentless pursuit. As she navigates the treacherous landscape, Tornado must outsmart the criminals hunting her down while leaving a trail of revenge in her wake. This action survival thriller promises to deliver high-stakes excitement and a fresh take on traditional samurai lore, as Tornado fights against the odds to avenge her father and forge her own destiny. Will she succeed in her quest, or will the gang claim her life as well?
CinemaSerf
To be honest, I was really quite disappointed with this. It all centres around the search for some stolen gold that has been re-stolen and hidden by “Tornado”, the partner in a father/daughter Japanese puppetry show that is touring the shires of late 18th century Britain. The gold was originally acquired by “Sugar” (Tim Roth) and his gang but as they stopped to watch the show, it was re-acquired by an opportunist urchin (Nathan Malone) whilst he was being watched by “Tornado” (Kôki). When the gang discover it’s missing, all hell breaks loose and so she hides the loot and the boy in their wagon and off they go. It doesn’t take long for the men to put two and two together and they set after the slow-moving visitors and a rather dishonourable encounter ensues. Meantime, “Little Sugar” (Jack Lowden) is tired of taking orders from his old man and has plans of his own to secure the cash - and that’s bound to lead to a conflict with his no-nonsense father. So now we have a brute chasing his money, a son looking for change and a samurai-trained woman out for revenge. It has the ingredients of a good adventure. Sadly, though, she is just not a very convincing actor, there is far too much meandering around the countryside setting and re-setting the scenario and there is a real paucity of pace here. It can’t have had an huge budget, but that needn’t have mattered if the the story had taken a little longer to develop a little more depth to the characters. It’s all too episodic and though it does mix the timelines a little to break up the narrative, there are too many characters who appear then add little before we move on. It does create an overall sense of a fairly poverty-stricken and lawless rural life, but once we hit the home straight it all just takes a predictable path to it’s conclusion. Nobody is really used to full effect here and though the bleakness is conveyed well enough, the story doesn’t really deliver.
posts by : CinemaSerf