• /
We are sorry you canceled your Premium subscription

You can still enjoy Flaticon Collections with the following limits:

  • You can choose only 3 collections to keep
  • You can only add up to 100 icons per collection
  • You cannot add Premium icons to your collection
The advantages of your collections changed
  • You can choose only 3 collections to keep
  • You can only add up to 100 icons per collection
  • You cannot add Premium icons to your collection

Keep making the most of your icons and collections

Get 20% OFF our
Annual Premium Plan

  • /
Select 3 collections to continue:

You have 8 collections but can only unlock 3 of them

    Stay Premium

    Select a color from the icon

      Choose a new color

      History

        Scale

        Move

        Move left
        Move right
        Move up
        Move down

        Rotate

        Rotate 90º right
        Rotate 90º left

        Flip

        Flip horizontal
        Flip vertical

        Select a shape

        None
        Circle
        Rounded square
        Square

        Size

        Color

        Stroke width

        px
        Undo
        Redo

        Ip Man [hd] (2008) Bluray 1080p May 2026

        The most famous sequence in the film—the fight where Ip Man takes on ten Japanese karate black belts simultaneously—is a perfect case study. In pristine 1080p, the viewer can track every rapid-fire chain punch and simultaneous block-and-strike. The high frame detail captures the precise moment of impact, emphasizing the sheer physics of Wing Chun. More importantly, the clarity captures Ip Man’s face. Throughout the first half of the film, his face in combat is serene, almost smiling. In the 10-man fight, driven by grief and rage over the death of his friend, his face is a mask of controlled fury. The HD resolution bridges the gap between the physical action and the raw emotion driving it, proving that action in this film is an extension of character dialogue. Nationalism, Masculinity, and Cultural Identity

        This thematic conflict reaches its zenith in the final duel between Ip Man and Miura. Broadcast to the occupied citizens of Foshan, the fight ceases to be a personal contest and becomes a proxy war for national dignity. Ip Man’s victory is not framed as a triumph of violence, but as a victory of the indomitable Chinese spirit. The film suggests that while the physical nation may be occupied, its cultural soul—embodied by Ip Man’s unwavering dignity and mastery—remains unconquerable. The Paradox of the Mythological Biography Ip Man [HD] (2008) Bluray 1080p

        It is impossible to analyze Ip Man without addressing the tension between history and cinematic myth-making. The real Ip Man was undoubtedly a master and a pivotal figure in martial arts history, but the film takes massive liberties with his life. The real Ip Man did not work in a coal mine, nor did he engage in a televised duel with a Japanese general. He was a wealthy man who later became a police officer, and his life during the war was marked more by quiet survival than cinematic heroism. The most famous sequence in the film—the fight

        When the Japanese occupation begins, the color palette is violently desaturated. The Blu-ray's superior contrast and black levels come to the forefront here. The vibrant golds and deep browns are replaced by a cold, oppressive spectrum of grays, blues, and stark whites. The high-definition clarity highlights the stark reality of the ruins, the texture of the dust on the characters' faces, and the physical decay of the city. This visual shift is not merely aesthetic; it mirrors the psychological crushing of the Chinese spirit under foreign occupation. Action as Philosophy: The Grammar of Wing Chun More importantly, the clarity captures Ip Man’s face

        How likely are you to recommend Flaticon to a friend?

        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
        Not likely Very likely