Hina tobimatsu biography templates

  • Hina Tobimatsu: Natsuki Kurenai Hina Tobimatsu (born on January 13, 1997) is a junior high school action star in Nishis martial arts gym.
  • Hina Tobimatsu.
  • The 13 year old Hina Tobimatsu is Japan's new official kicking machine - she flies without wires (constantly mistaking her opponents as stairs) and can take.
  • KG: Karate Girl (Japan, 2011)

    Lately, Japanese action cinema has been like a hamburger. First there is director, screenwriter, and action choreographer. Then the beef (choreographer) takes a hike and makes a film of his own. Finally, the choreographer’s screenwriter (sandwich) declares himself as director and delivers the third film in the continuation. This is the history of recent karate film from Black Belt (2007) to High Kick Girl (2009) and finally KG: Karate Girl (2011).

    Rina Takeda, Japan’s most promising new action talent, caught the chain during its second phase. The 1991 born sweetheart fought herself a black belt in Ryukyu Shorin-ryu karate before entering show biz. Her film debut High-Kick Girl was a karate demo suffering from inadequate cinematic execution. Furthermore, she was overshadowed by the more skilled karate sensei Tatsuya Naka, who appears in all three films.

    In KG Takeda is back in action as yet another super karate shoujo. The storyline kicks off with O

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  • COF Presents: The 40 Best Martial Arts Movies of 2010 – 2019 (& 10 of the Worst!)

    What would the end of a decade be without a look back on the movies which came out of it? We may no longer be in the golden era of fight flicks, but one only needs to spend a few moments thinking of the past 10 years, to realise there’s still plenty of talent with the enthusiasm and skill to create a great martial arts movie. From new blood like Iko Uwais and Max Zhang, to members of the old guard like Sammo Hung and Jackie Chan, the 10’s was a decade which gave everyone their moment to shine.

    This list started out in early December as a Top 10, and as the month progressed, before it hit Christmas it had become almost 100. Realising it wasn’t supposed to be a record of how many martial arts movies I could remember watching over the last decade, the last days of 2019 where spent trimming and pruning, often after a restless night of wrestling with my conscience as to what should stay and what sh

    Rina Takeda: The Next Action Heroine?

      By Jim McLennanFeature

    Last month, we saw MMA star Gina Carano hit the big-screen in Haywire, but she’s not the first genuine kvinna martial-artist to have started a movie career. Most obviously, Cynthia Rothtock was a five-time World Karate Champion in forms and weapons, and has a number of black belts in various disciplines. Similarly, Jeeja Yanin was a third-Dan black belt in Taekwondo, before hitting the silver screen in Chocolat. But here, we’ll be looking at the name that has recently emerged out of Japan, Rina Takeda, holder of a black belt in Ryukyu Shorin-ryu Karate.

    Born in 1991, Takeda was reportedly inspired to take up the martial-art at the age of ten, when she saw her father get knocked out of a karate tournament, and was determined to avenge his defeat. [If you’ve seen the “plot” – quotes used advisely – of some of her films, this makes a great deal of sense…]