Indonesian Action Maestro Timo Tjahjanto on Bringing His Signature Ultra-Violence to Netflix’s ‘The Shadow Strays’

If there were an AI prompt behind Indonesian action maestro Timo Tjahjanto’s latest Netflix movie The Shadow Strays, it would probably go something like this: “Give me John Wick but make it Indonesian women with uzis and samurai swords — and more brutal.” 

Not that anything feels remotely artificial about the viscerally kinetic setpieces that explode off the screen throughout the cult filmmaker’s latest action melodrama. 

Tjahjanto has won a worldwide following with his relentlessly creative fight choreographies, punctuated with liberal doses of squirm-inducing ultra-violence. The Shadow Strays is his second film for Netflix, following the more comedic The Big 4, under an ongoing multi-picture deal. He also recently wrapped production on his Hollywood debut, the action sequel Nobody 2, starring Bob Odenkirk, Sharon Stone and the RZA, which is due out in 2025. 

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