Bloodsport II: The Next Kumite explained

Bloodsport II:
The Next Kumite
Director:Alan Mehrez
Producer:Alan Mehrez
Starring:Daniel Bernhardt
Pat Morita
Donald Gibb
James Hong
Music:Stephen Edwards
Cinematography:Jacques Haitkin
Editing:J. Douglas Seelig
Studio:F.M. Entertainment International N.V.
Distributor:Transcontinental Film Corporation
(VHS)
Lions Gate Entertainment (DVD)
Runtime:86 min.
Language:English
Gross:$684,351[1]

Bloodsport II: The Next Kumite is a 1996 martial arts sports directed and produced by Alan Mehrez, from a script written by Jeff Schechter. It is the standalone sequel to Bloodsport (1988), and the second installment in the titular film series. The movie stars Daniel Bernhardt, a new character in the series; and was released through limited theatrical distribution, before debuting on home video in 1996. The film was met with a warm critical response, with praise directed towards its cast namely Daniel Bernhardt's leading role. It met expectations of the audience with some calling it superior to the original. The film has garnered a cult following.

Plot

After thief Alex Cardo (Daniel Bernhardt) gets caught and betrayed by his partner in crime John (Philip Tan) while stealing an ancient Jian in Thailand, he soon finds himself imprisoned and beaten. One of the guards, Demon (Ong Soo Han), is particularly upset by Alex's appearance and tortures him whenever he gets the opportunity. Alex finds one friend and mentor in the jailhouse, Master Sun (James Hong), who teaches him a superior fighting style called "Iron Hand". When a "best of the best kumite" is to take place, Demon gets an invitation. Now Master Sun and Alex need to find a way to let Alex take part in the kumite, too.

The final fight pits Alex and Demon together. At first, and for a long time, Demon has the upper hand in terms of strength and fighting ability. When Alex is down, he takes one last look at Master Sun and uses the "Iron Hand" against his opponent, severely damaging and defeating Demon. Alex is the winner, and as part of deals previously made, Master Sun is freed from prison, and so is Alex.

Cast

Series continuity

Actor Donald Gibb also appeared in the first Bloodsport film as Ray Jackson. He is the only returning character from the first film. James Hong and Pat Morita appear in both Bloodsport II and Bloodsport III.

Cameo

Canadian novelist Kevin Chong had a minor role in the film as Sun's student.

Reception

The film was met with a warm critical response, with praise directed towards its cast namely Daniel Bernhardt's leading role.[2] It met expectations of the audience with some calling it superior to the original.[3] The film has garnered a cult following.[4]

Sequel

See main article: Bloodsport (film series).

The movie was followed by sequel films, including Bloodsport III (1998) and (1999). Daniel Bernhardt reprised his role as Alex Cardo for the sequel, while the actor portrayed a new character named John Keller in Bloodsport 4.

In other media

The movie was released with various titles in the foreign market:

O Grande Dragāo Branco: A Revanche (The Great White Dragon: The Revenge)

Bloodsport II: Ironhand

Colpi Proibiti 2 (Prohibited Shots 2)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bloodsport 2 (1996) – Financial Information . . 3 June 2020.
  2. Web site: Bloodsport 2: Why Daniel Bernhardt Replaced Jean-Claude Van Damme. ScreenRant. Curran, Brad. November 13, 2020. June 19, 2023.
  3. Web site: Bloodsport 2: Why Daniel Bernhardt Replaced Jean-Claude Van Damme. ScreenRant. Curran, Brad. November 13, 2020. June 19, 2023.
  4. https://moviemavericks.com/2010/11/interview-daniel-bernhardt/