Jake (Jason Yee) is a guy who let his gambling debts spiral out of control. Consequently, he considered himself lucky that his bookie was willing to let himself work off his debt by serving as a chauffeur and bodyguard for a mob-owned escort service run by a pimp named Simon (Ron Yuan) out of a whorehouse called the Naked Eye.

Over the course of his brief tenure there, Jake develops feelings for a sweet, 16 year-old runaway (Samantha Streets), the proverbial hooker with a heart of gold. However, before their relationship has a chance to blossom, Sandy turns up dead.

In the wake of the grim discovery, it becomes clear that nobodyโ€™s interested in solving the gruesome murder. So, Jake decides to take the law into his own hands, and proceeds to leave a bloody trail in his quest for the truth.

That is the basic plotline of The Girl from the Naked Eye, an ambitious neo-noir by 25 year-old David Ren, a wunderkind whose directorial debut, the romantic comedy Shanghai Kiss (2007), came while he was still a teenager. Here, he makes the most of a modest budget via a visually-captivating whodunit laced with highly-stylized martial arts action.

The movieโ€™s play-by-play is narrated pulp fiction-style by the pictureโ€™s revenge-minded protagonist played by Jason Yee. The former World Kick-Boxing Champ also orchestrated the acrobatic fight sequences, and proves himself far more adapt at delivering punches than delivering dialogue.

A compelling chopsocky flick made in America, featuring a homegrown matinee idol who might very well blossom into the next Bruce Lee.

Very Good (3 stars)
Rated R for violence, sexuality, ethnic slurs and pervasive profanity.
Running time: 84 minutes
Distributor: Naedomi Media

To see a trailer for The Girl from the Naked Eye, visit:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTklzWCjXr4