![]() The job went to Todor Chapkanov, who had performed second unit duties on Nu Image's major production London Has Fallen just prior. Isaac Florentine (who had helmed the second and third installments) was slated to direct this one as well, but ultimately opted to pass on the directing gig in order to tend to his ill wife, although he remained involved as a producer. The film was previously known under the working title Undisputed IV. Boyka continues fighting in the prison to pursue the title of most complete martial artist in the world. Six months later, Alma visits Boyka in prison and tells that she finally forgives him. An injured Boyka asks Alma if she can forgive him for what he did to Viktor and is arrested by the police. Boyka gets shot, but he grabs Zourab and chokes him to death. After some intense moments, Boyka breaks one arm and one leg of Koshmar and finally kicks him out of the ring, knocking him unconscious.Įnraged, Zourab takes Alma as a hostage and orders his henchmen to kill Boyka, but Boyka kills all of Zourab's henchmen and chases after him. ![]() Zourab thinks Boyka cannot defeat Koshmar as he has a large and strong body. Koshmar is a giant, furious and relentless martial artist. Zourab bribes a high-ranking police officer to bring Koshmar to his club. Boyka is about to leave, but Zourab forces him to fight one more match to defeat his true champion. In the third match, Boyka defeats Igor Kazmir, who is the elite henchman of Zourab. Alma tells that she cannot leave the children and the center as the children could become gangsters or bad guys. In the community center, Boyka asks Alma why she does not leave the town. Boyka easily defeats his opponent in the first match and then must fight two brothers in the second match, where he defeats them by double knockout. Alma invites Boyka to the training room in the community center for his training. Zourab agrees and suggests Boyka to fight in three matches. Boyka wants to help Alma pay her debt so he makes a deal with Zourab that he will fight for him in exchange for Alma's freedom. Zourab is now searching for a good martial artist to fight in his club. Alma lives in a community center and serves as a waitress in Zourab's underground fighting club. In the Russian town of Drovny, Boyka finds out that Alma owes money to a crime boss named Zourab. After discovering Viktor has a wife named Alma, Boyka tells Kiril to make a fake passport and goes to Russia to meet Alma. In a match, Boyka accidentally kills his opponent Viktor and begins to regret and thinks about what he is fighting for. Boyka still fights in underground matches in Kyiv, Ukraine. Several months after the events of the previous film, Yuri Boyka is now a free man and has a manager named Kiril. Scott Adkins reprises his role as Yuri Boyka. It is the sequel to the 2010 film Undisputed III: Redemption. The fight scenes of the Undisputed films are as out-of-this-world as it gets, and Adkins has never been less than breathtaking in action in what has become his signature role.Boyka: Undisputed (also known as Boyka: Undisputed 4), is a 2017 American-Bulgarian martial arts film directed by Todor Chapkanov, and written by David White and Tony Mosher from a story by Boaz Davidson. Adkins is one of the most dynamic and versatile martial artists in modern action movies, and has long been at the frontline of the renaissance of straight-to-video movies regularly eclipsing theatrical action scenes. On top of that, when it comes to martial arts action, the Boyka-centric Undisputed movies deliver on their title and then some. Throughout his story, Scott Adkins' portrayal of Boyka is the kind of performance where it's impossible to imagine anyone else in the role. He also begins to genuinely repent for his misdeeds Undisputed 2, helping another prisoner to escape the rigged tournament at what he believes will be the cost of his own freedom in Undisputed 3, and later sacrificing everything he's achieved for himself to save the widow of a man he accidentally killed in the ring in Boyka: Undisputed. Though he consistently maintains his single-minded focus on being the world's greatest fighter, his loss in Undisputed 2 humbles him to overcome his bad knee and build himself back up in Undisputed 3. Boyka evolves greatly over his three appearances.
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