IMDb RATING
4.2/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
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.After his trainer is murdered, Alex Cardo uses his martial arts skills and takes on the one responsible.
Amber Kelleher-Andrews
- Crystal Duvalier
- (as Amber Van Lent)
Steven D. Ito
- Yoong
- (as Steve Ito)
Nicholas R. Oleson
- The Beast
- (as Nicholas Oleson)
Sidney S. Liufau
- Kimo Lima Lama
- (as Sid Liufau)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Daniel Bernhard returns in this 3rd installment in the series. I suspect that this movie were made in a big rush, since it's worse than "Bloodsport 2" in many ways. First of all, the story is a little bit too standard. But that is of course not the most important. The fighting in this movie isn't that good, and it's just too much of the same styles. The Kumite in this movie has to be the worst Kumite ever arranged. One detail that particularly draw my attention, was one of the fighters sitting on the bench ringside and waiting to fight. On the bench, he didn't have any hair on his chest at all. But when he was fighting, he suddenly had lots of hair. Things like this confirms that this is a C-movie, and probably really low-budget. What where they thinking?
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 ...
There isn't much to say about this film, except that slowly goes down... This is just one of those bad martial arts films... with classic story about Alex Cardo who's taking a revenge upon a rich mobster and his "monster" fighter called the Beast. Again with Daniel Bernhardt in leading role and his Van Damme face expressions. He travels on Thailand to another master to train him for next Kumite. But, this time... it IS personal! We get to see John Rhys Davies as the leading bad guy, the mobster, who is doing nothing but walking around with a large cigar in his mouth and look menacing, just like in "Cyborg Cop", James Hong and Pat Morita are there again... The fights are good, no complaints there... This is strictly for martial arts fans.
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)
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???
Did you know
- TriviaDaniel 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.
- GoofsWhen 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.
- Alternate versionsThe scene, where "The Beast" kills a fighter during the Kumite was cut from the German Video-Release.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Bloodsport 4: The Dark Kumite (1999)
- SoundtracksClair De Lune
by Claude Debussy
Performed by Stephen Edwards (as Steve Edwards)
Courtesy Six Feet Five Music
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 31m(91 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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