

Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist
A multi-layered series that looks back to the formative years of Ryu and Ken as they live a traditional warrior's life in secluded Japan.
Why watch Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist
# Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist
Christian Howard and Mike Moh embody Ryu and Ken at their rawest—two young fighters training in isolation, their rivalry simmering beneath ritual and discipline. This isn't the arcade-game spectacle you expect; it's a grounded, almost Karate Kid-meets-Warrior meditation on what it costs to master violence. The series treats martial arts as a spiritual practice, not just a vehicle for flashy combat.
Shot with deliberate, painterly framing, Assassin's Fist moves at a contemplative pace that rewards patience. Togo Igawa's mentor figure carries the quiet authority of a sensei who's seen too much, while the secluded Japanese setting becomes its own character—moss-covered temples, rain-soaked training grounds, the kind of atmosphere A24 would greenlight. It's methodical where you'd expect chaos, introspective where you'd expect showboating.
This is for anyone who loved the Cobra Kai ethos or the grounded martial-arts storytelling of The Protégé. You'll walk away with a deeper hunger to understand these characters' origins, and the final sequences alone—where years of discipline crystallize into devastating technique—will stay with you long after the credits roll.
— The What2Watch desk · US
Where to watch
The story
A multi-layered series that looks back to the formative years of Ryu and Ken as they live a traditional warrior's life in secluded Japan.
If you liked this
Reviews & ratings
No reviews yet. See on TMDB






















