
However the direction and the fight scenes are executed so masterfully that it makes the story easy to relate to. Again, the story is nothing new to write home about it's basically the Hong Kong version of "Rocky IV", with Donne Yen playing "Ip Man" which is equivalent to Stallone's iconic character, and a very buffed-up Darren Shahlavi playing a British boxer which is the equivalent of Dolph Lundgren's "Ivan Drago" character. This is proof that this movie is not all-action, but it has a big heart as well. The reason? He found a family and humbled down, realizing his foolish mistakes in the past. One part I did like about this sequel though a villain in the previous film now becomes a like-able friend in this one.

However, the British actors are the ones I'm complaining about, some of their acting is just overdone and hammy. On one hand we have the Chinese actors giving their best, including Sammo Hung in a memorable role as a fellow martial-arts master. His fighting skills prove that in spades. He is perfect as the wise sifu Ip Man and he acts rationally without ever losing control of himself. As per the first film, Donnie Yen once again proves that he can act AND fight at the same time. And that is exactly what Yen, Yip and company have made here: a sequel which is surprisingly as solid as the first.

They wanted more of the same: martial-arts action-laden sequences carefully woven around an old-fashioned moral lesson about martial arts. People wanted more out of Donnie Yen and Wilson Yip. Ever since "Ip Man" started making waves across Asia, a continuation/sequel was inevitable.
