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IMDbPro

China O'Brien II

  • Video
  • 1990
  • R
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
989
YOUR RATING
China O'Brien II (1990)
ActionCrimeDrama

This time China O'Brien has trouble with a dealer who puts a prize on her head because she had spoiled an important drug deal of his. But all the world's criminals will not be enough to catc... Read allThis time China O'Brien has trouble with a dealer who puts a prize on her head because she had spoiled an important drug deal of his. But all the world's criminals will not be enough to catch up with China, one of the masters of the martial arts.This time China O'Brien has trouble with a dealer who puts a prize on her head because she had spoiled an important drug deal of his. But all the world's criminals will not be enough to catch up with China, one of the masters of the martial arts.

  • Director
    • Robert Clouse
  • Writers
    • Robert Clouse
    • Craig Clyde
    • James Hennessy
  • Stars
    • Cynthia Rothrock
    • Richard Norton
    • Keith Cooke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    989
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Clouse
    • Writers
      • Robert Clouse
      • Craig Clyde
      • James Hennessy
    • Stars
      • Cynthia Rothrock
      • Richard Norton
      • Keith Cooke
    • 14User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Top cast45

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    Cynthia Rothrock
    Cynthia Rothrock
    • China O'Brien
    Richard Norton
    Richard Norton
    • Matt Conroy
    Keith Cooke
    Keith Cooke
    • Dakota
    Frank Magner
    • Frank Atkins
    Harlow Marks
    • Charlie Baskin
    Tiffany Soter
    • Jill Atkins
    Tricia Quai
    • Annie Atkins
    Donré Sampson
    Donré Sampson
    • Omar
    • (as Don Re Sampson)
    Gary A. Rogers
    • Vargas
    Douglas Caputo
    • Kurt
    Billy Joe Allgood
    • Snow
    Jaren Harbrecht
    • Jake
    James Horrocks
    • Jimmy
    J.R. Clover
    • Chester
    Cindy Clark
    Cindy Clark
    • Lucille
    Michael Anthony
    • Russell
    Bruce Ackerman
    • Zaccaro
    Becky Harding
    • Reporter #1
    • Director
      • Robert Clouse
    • Writers
      • Robert Clouse
      • Craig Clyde
      • James Hennessy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.1989
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    Featured reviews

    6coltras35

    China O'Brien 2

    This time China O'Brien has trouble with a dealer who puts a prize on her head because she had spoiled an important drug deal of his. But all the world's criminals will not be enough to ... She's back... and deadlier than ever.

    A bit slow to get moving due to the set up, but at around the third act the sequel of China O'Brien gets moving with some spinning kicks which our trio ( Rothrock, Norton and Cooke) hand out with unrestrained relish. It's not as good the first film, the story not as engaging, however it's a joy to see some straightforward martial arts, blocks, strikes and locks. I especially am impressed by Keith Cooke, who clad in leather jacket, channels Bruce Lee but with more leg action. Boy is he nimble and fast. Pity he didn't have a film career of his own, he got the moves. All in all, China O'Brien is a standard yet satisfying sequel.
    7BrickNash

    Solid enough film with superb fight scenes

    China O' Brien II picks up where the first film left off, and it's almost literally more of the same. This means TV movie quality plot interspersed with some great martial arts action.

    As a film, it's certainly not the worst ever made. It's about as solidly entertaining as any episode of Columbo or Walker Texas Ranger, and really no worse than any other martial arts flick. As with the first one, where the film excels is the fight scenes, which are dynamic and very well choreographed, with some brilliant OTT sound effects.

    The film's plot centres around some bog standard pap about an escaped convict terrorising the town, and in that it makes some mistakes. As with the first film, the main bad guy is an older dude with no fighting skills whatsoever, and so there is really no final threat or showdown. Just a big free for all brawl involving loads of people.

    It would have been nice to have China go up against another female martial arts villain as the main baddie, but we are talking early 90s here.

    Where the film excels other than the fights is its lead character. The appeal of China O'Brien is her wholesomeness, which juxtaposes her fighting skill very well. There's no need to rely on blatant sex appeal, nudity, or an "edgy" persona, and the film does a very good job of showing that you can be tough, but still be a nice person - an important and very good role model.

    Also, watching China beat the s-h-i-t out of endless waves of plaid shirted goons is infinitely satisfying.

    While it starts ok, the film has some issues in the second half. A lot of the action scenes feel very cobbled together, and while the choreography is still great, the fights end all too soon - most notably the Keith Cooke/Billy Blanks duel, and the fight with the clawed henchmen played my Toshiro Obata of Turtles fame (why wasn't he the main villain?). They feel like runtime extenders which were shot post production, and they're just not long enough.

    Still, as thin as the plot is, it's executed well enough to keep the pace going, and fans won't be disappointed by the highly satisfying action one bit.

    One for the collection!
    5ebiros2

    Cynthia Rothrock looks too Wholesome

    Same thing I've said for China O'Brien applies to China O'Brien 2. They should have hired the guy who did the choreography for "Inspector Wears Skirts" for this movie, and upped the action to that level.

    Made by Golden Harvest, and produced, and directed by American producer and director, China O'Brien was in the perfect spot to take advantage of best from both worlds. Unfortunately, Raymond Chow probably didn't want to put in the budget to make this into a first class movie.

    It could have been like "So Close" if China O'Brien character was bit more edgier, but this is a product of the '80s, so edginess was not part of movie making. She kind of looks too wholesome that takes away from her sex appeal, and also lowers the tension of the movie.

    The producers failed to produce Cynthia Rothrock properly. She could have done lot better in these movies.
    lor_

    Mediocre Rothrock movie

    My review was written in August 1992 after watching the movie on Imperial video cassette.

    Made in 1989, this Cynthia Rothrock vehicle is a haphazard affari, generating little interest in her ongoing exploits as femme sheriff of a small American town.

    Nemesis this time is Harlow Marks, a bitter drug lord who's just escaped from prison. He's mad at Rothrock, and she's dead set on recapturing him.

    Rothrock and her pals Richard Norton and Keith Cooke demonstrate their high-kicking ability in several fight scenes, but the film's storyline is perfunctory. Wrap-up is rapid and arbitrary.

    Rothrock, poised for a network TV series, is still green in the acting department here, while co-star Norton's role is severely underwritten; he merely pops up out of nowhere when a fight is imminent.

    Pic is from the same team that made Bruce Lee's "Enter the Dragon" 17 years earlier, but they didn't try very hard this time.
    5paul_m_haakonsen

    A rather bland sequel...

    Just having sat through the 1990 movie "China O'Brien" and been positively surprised and entertained by it, I opted to carry on and watch the 1990 sequel "China O'Brien II". And just like the predecessor, it was a movie that I had never seen before, given my lack of interest in Cynthia Rothrock in general.

    Writers Robert Clouse, Craig Clyde and James Hennessy put together a script and storyline that wasn't as entertaining as the predecessor. Sure, it was a watchable movie, but the narrative was a bit all over the place, and there wasn't really a properly cohesive red thread throughout the course of the movie, making it feel rather erratic and random.

    It was good to have the three leads from the first movie return to reprise their characters and roles in the movie. And the acting performances in the movie were fair.

    "China O'Brien II" was held afloat by the action and martial arts sequences throughout the course of the 92 minutes that the movie ran for.

    This sequel, from director Robert Clouse, was disappointing in comparison to the predecessor.

    My rating of "China O'Brien II" lands on a five out of ten stars.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Some of the action scenes were filmed following the initial shoot, to ensure that the movie would be long enough. These scenes included the fight between Keith Cooke and Billy Blanks, the latter of which was cast at short notice for specifically this scene.
    • Goofs
      Throughout the movie (most notable in final sequences), Dakota wears different headbands in consecutive scenes
    • Quotes

      Matt Conroy: You okay?

      China O'Brien: It's tough sometimes, being a woman.

      Matt Conroy: [glances at chair she just kicked] Or being a chair.

    • Connections
      Featured in Obscurus Lupa Presents: China O'Brien 2 (2011)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1992 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Чайна О'Брайен 2
    • Production companies
      • Fred Weintraub Productions
      • GH Pictures
      • Golden Harvest Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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