IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,2/10
1834
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter his trainer is murdered, Alex Cardo uses his martial arts skills and takes on the one responsible.After his trainer is murdered, Alex Cardo uses his martial arts skills and takes on the one responsible.After his trainer is murdered, Alex Cardo uses his martial arts skills and takes on the one responsible.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Amber Kelleher-Andrews
- Crystal Duvalier
- (as Amber Van Lent)
Steven D. Ito
- Yoong
- (as Steve Ito)
Gerald Okamura
- Voice of the Judge
- (Synchronisation)
Nicholas R. Oleson
- The Beast
- (as Nicholas Oleson)
Sidney S. Liufau
- Kimo Lima Lama
- (as Sid Liufau)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Fans of martial art flicks will find pieces to like in 'Bloodsport 3', but the formula is starting to wear thin. The fights are alright, but saving grace is it's cast (many returning faces). By now you know the drill - training montages, revenge, spirituality - and while this entry doesn't have a satisfying finale, it's still got a level of b-movie charm. Once again the tale is told in flashback.
Alex Cardo (Daniel Bernhardt) won the Kumite in Bangkok and then retired from fighting to be a successful gambler in India. After beating off some ninjas at the local casino and retrieving a stolen package for the owners, he meets mob boss Duvalier (John Rhy-Davies) who's gonna host a Kumite and wants him involved. When Alex declines, he lashes out at people close to him, tries to have him killed or at the very least denied entrance to the tournament. He's put all his money on his fighter 'The Beast' and doesn't want him to upset his plans to win.
James Hong returns in a minor way as Sun again. Ditto Pat Morita as Leung and even Judge Macado (Hee-il Cho). They're not specific about how much time has passed, but Cardo has a young son (no word on the mother) now which he tells the tale. Honestly the story is piecemeal at best and illogical at worst. Obviously low budget and very simple. Few scraps along the way to the finale and there's hints of romance, but nothing ever comes of two ladies.
'Bloodsport 3' stands on it's own in the sense that you don't have to see the flicks that came before it, but being familiar with '2' adds heart. Bernhardt is still up to task, returning cameos help and while Davies doesn't get the opportunity to chew the scenery like the way he did in 'Cyborg Cop' just having him was nice. I can't discount though that I became bored and the Kumite, end villain was rather underwhelming.
Alex Cardo (Daniel Bernhardt) won the Kumite in Bangkok and then retired from fighting to be a successful gambler in India. After beating off some ninjas at the local casino and retrieving a stolen package for the owners, he meets mob boss Duvalier (John Rhy-Davies) who's gonna host a Kumite and wants him involved. When Alex declines, he lashes out at people close to him, tries to have him killed or at the very least denied entrance to the tournament. He's put all his money on his fighter 'The Beast' and doesn't want him to upset his plans to win.
James Hong returns in a minor way as Sun again. Ditto Pat Morita as Leung and even Judge Macado (Hee-il Cho). They're not specific about how much time has passed, but Cardo has a young son (no word on the mother) now which he tells the tale. Honestly the story is piecemeal at best and illogical at worst. Obviously low budget and very simple. Few scraps along the way to the finale and there's hints of romance, but nothing ever comes of two ladies.
'Bloodsport 3' stands on it's own in the sense that you don't have to see the flicks that came before it, but being familiar with '2' adds heart. Bernhardt is still up to task, returning cameos help and while Davies doesn't get the opportunity to chew the scenery like the way he did in 'Cyborg Cop' just having him was nice. I can't discount though that I became bored and the Kumite, end villain was rather underwhelming.
No pun intended - and I completely forgot to mention this when I reviewed the very first Bloodsport. Supposedly there is this secret tournament ... but also everyone seems to know about it. And it seems super easy to get to it ... to say the least. The reporter woman was a good example on that.
But back to this - a movie that sheds the last remaining part that connected the second movie with the first one! So no more Mr. Jackson for you (and for me ... and for all the viewers). But this does take Bernhardts character and tries to elevate him to a new level. We even have flashbacks to the second Bloodsport. Is that enough for you? Or the fact that the fight scenes are not entirely bad to be honest ... still there is something missing .. shame for the good lead ...
But back to this - a movie that sheds the last remaining part that connected the second movie with the first one! So no more Mr. Jackson for you (and for me ... and for all the viewers). But this does take Bernhardts character and tries to elevate him to a new level. We even have flashbacks to the second Bloodsport. Is that enough for you? Or the fact that the fight scenes are not entirely bad to be honest ... still there is something missing .. shame for the good lead ...
Not interesting at all, plot is also bad. Bloodsport I was okay, II was kinda watchable, but III and IV are terrible! Poor acting, poor fighting scenes... This movie is one of those movies where you want to leave the cinema although you paid to watch it. Of course I didn't watch it in the cinema, but I was like "dear God, will it end already". You get bored watching it, you know the ending, there are no surprising parts, twists, nothing. I give it 5/10 while being very very generous! It's better than Bloodsport IV, but hey, that's not so hard since IV is one of the worst movies ever made! It would be better for director if he hadn't made sequels after first Bloodsport movie with van Damme. I'm really disappointed.
Swiss martial arts dude Daniel Bernhardt stands in again for Van Damme in this second sequel to "Bloodsport". Alex Cardo has retired from martial arts after winning the Kumite in the last flick, but rich heavy Jonathan Rhys-Davies wants him to compete in a new Kumite he's putting on. When our hero refuses, Davies kills his former teacher James Hong (who wisely appears to have agreed to be in this movie for less than 5 minutes). Cardo seeks out Pat Morita (also in this flick for mere minutes), who hooks Cardo up with his brother, who trains him, even though it is repeatedly stated that Cardo is the best martial artist in the world. He returns to take revenge on Davies by entering the Kumite ... which is actually what Davies wanted him to do in the first place. I confess to being confused at this point. Cardo "gets revenge" by winning the competition, which is what Davies wanted ... but now he doesn't???
Daniel Bernhardt returns as Alex Cardo as he tells in flashback to his son, how his mentor James Hong was killed, how he wins the kumite against "The Beast" who is a titan and along the way discusses how he met the lad's mother. Also on how the kid's grandfather was a no good scumbag, in other words it is Bloodsport for a younger generation. Bloodsport II wasn't exactly great (In fact far from good) but when compared to this boring dud of a sequel, it almost feels as if you can sense how bored the movie is with itself. The fight sequences this time are terribly staged, with martial artistry so sloppy, you'd swear you walked in on a drunken fight. The movie starts off reasonably well enough but once the training montage begins, you'll be so bored that your only excitement in the fight sequences, will be getting closer to the ending. The movie is just so lame. Also the singing in which Amber van Lynt does, is quite positively more damaging to the human body, then any harm "The Beast" inflicts. (I'm not sure if i'm the first to bring that up, but how nobody remembers such awful singing is mind boggling.)
* out of 4-(Bad)
* out of 4-(Bad)
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDaniel Bernhardt revealed in an interview with Scott Adkins on web-camera (available on YouTube) that Van Damme was initially considered to reprise the starring role.
- PatzerWhen Alex goes to the warehouse from the note, he slides over a table full of money, in the next shot the money is gone from the table and isn't on the floor either.
- Alternative VersionenThe scene, where "The Beast" kills a fighter during the Kumite was cut from the German Video-Release.
- VerbindungenFollowed by Bloodsport 4 (1999)
- SoundtracksClair De Lune
by Claude Debussy
Performed by Stephen Edwards (as Steve Edwards)
Courtesy Six Feet Five Music
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 31 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.33 : 1
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