Undisputed: Why Boyka Began As A Villain (and Why That Was The Series’ Best Move)

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Undisputed: Why Boyka Began As A Villain (and Why That Was The Series' Best Move)
Undisputed franchise star Yuri Boyka started out as a villain, and it was a very smart move on the show’s part. Directed by Scott Adkins, Undisputed 2: Last Man Standing is a rare case where the second chapter of a film series is much more responsible for the dynamics of the series than the first. A sequel to the 2002 prison boxing film Undisputed, it completely changed the face of the series from how it first appeared. In the original Undisputed, former world heavyweight boxing champion George “Iceman” Chambers (Ving Rhames) is sent to prison. With his cellmate Monroe Hutcheon (Wesley Snipes), the prison’s reigning boxing champion, they meet in the ring to find out who the true undisputed champion is.
Undisputed: Why Boyka Began As A Villain (and Why That Was The Series' Best Move)
Despite being the first film in the series, it’s possible that many of its fans haven’t even seen Undisputed, and Undisputed 2 completely breathes new life into the franchise. Undisputed 2 introduced Yuri Boyka (Scott Adkins) as its antagonist, a true fighting machine in the MMA world of the Russian prisons. Boyka regards himself as “The Most Complete Fighter in the World”, believing that God has gifted him with his extraordinary fighting skills. This made Boyka a complex and nuanced villain in Undisputed 2. Additionally, his subsequent rise to the series’ main star shows how clever it was for him to start out as a very different kind of villain.
Undisputed: Why Boyka Began As A Villain (and Why That Was The Series' Best Move)

Undisputed 2 Took The Series In A New Direction

On paper, Undisputed 2 sounds like a shot in the dark at best. The original Undisputed left theaters just as uneventfully as it arrived in 2002. Although it found a second life in home media, the idea of a sequel would still seem counter-intuitive given how unremarkable its original release was, especially without the original cast. On the other hand, with Yuri Boyka involved, history suggests that Undisputed 2’s disregard for this business advice made it one of the smartest sequels of the modern era. The move from boxing to MMA allowed Undisputed 2 to stand out as a direct-to-video sequel at a time when such things were starting to command more respect. For anyone who looked at it, Undisputed 2 was both refreshing and surprising, with fight scenes from an incredibly diverse range of martial arts. This was key to helping the Undisputed series really take off with its second film, while Boyka himself was the other half of the equation.

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Undisputed: Why Boyka Began As A Villain (and Why That Was The Series' Best Move)

Boyka Invested Viewers In The Series By Being A Very Different Kind Of Antagonist

Even among die-hard action fans, Scott Adkins was barely known at the time of Undisputed 2. This made Boyka the perfect character to showcase what he could bring if he had a prominent screen presence. What further endeared Boyka to audiences was the fact that he was the antagonist of Undisputed 2. However, he was a very unconventional villainous opponent for the wrongly imprisoned Chambers (Michael Jai White, taking over the role from Ving Rhames). Although Boyka was a bad guy in some ways, the film made audiences root for him thanks to his warrior mentality and unbreakable code of honor. In particular, when Boyka learns that Chambers was drugged without his knowledge during their first fight, he becomes enraged to the point that he kills the two inmates behind it.
Boyka was far from a resilient character, but none of the truly evil villains in the Undisputed series would have given up an illegitimate victory the way Boyka did. Add in Boyka’s amazing and extremely eclectic fighting style and Chambers’ initially obnoxious personality, and Boyka’s loss in the rematch suddenly became something that viewers weren’t thrilled about. Of course, Chambers changed and won his freedom after being framed, but Boyka was the antagonist that audiences came to admire. This made Boyka’s transformation into an anti-hero in Undisputed 3: Redemption and a truly selfless hero in Boyka: Undisputed the point where Undisputed actually became a vibrant and popular martial arts franchise. Having Bokja as the antagonist of his first meeting with Chambers also gave the series something it could later capitalize on whenever it felt like it.

Boyka & Chambers’ First Confrontation Gave The Undisputed Series A Great Secret Weapon

Undisputed 2 shows Chambers and Boyka as fighters whose skills are great but whose attitudes need work. Both gained revised perspectives on themselves and the art of fighting that they needed by the end of Undisputed 2. What didn’t change was that Boyka and Chambers still have nothing but raging enmity for each other. While Boyka would become the star of the series from Undisputed 3 on, Chambers remains the trump card the franchise can pull out at any time after Undisputed 2. The idea of Boyka and Chambers meeting again would sell the next chapter of Undisputed as the series’ ultimate rematch and the one many of its fans have been waiting for. What would make it even better is how different both Boyka and Chambers are after Undisputed 2.
They might still see each other as enemies, but a third match in the ring would play out very differently with how each has evolved. Conversely, the redemption each has undergone could make a reluctant team-up quite the curveball for the Undisputed series to throw. The point is, after Undisputed 2, Boyka and Chambers meeting again is the series’ nuclear option. Especially considering Scott Adkins and Michael Jai White’s subsequent acclaim in action movies, Undisputed 5 with Boyka and Chambers coming face-to-face once more would be the ultimate pay-off for the series. Filmmaker Liam O’Donnell, having penned a treatment for Undisputed 5, could even take that concept further with the Undisputed sequel to end all Undisputed sequels.
Undisputed: Why Boyka Began As A Villain (and Why That Was The Series' Best Move)
Undisputed wouldn’t be what it is without Boyka, and his journey is just as important to that as Scott Adkins’ portrayal of him. Feeling that his abilities as a fighter were literally of divine origin, Boyka also forgot pride as one of the seven deadly sins and paid for it. However, he was not an incorrigible or even truly evil antagonist, as Undisputed 3 and Boyka: Undisputed show. Rather, Boyka was a fighter who learned not to let his zeal cloud his judgment, and this made Boyka’s start as the villain in Undisputed 2 his best start. Even better: Chambers’ return in Undisputed 5 would inevitably flip the script on their first conflict and continue to propel the Undisputed martial arts franchise forward with the unstoppable energy of Boyka himself.

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