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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars best fight scenes ever
The first Bloodsport will always be the best of the series, and probably remains as one of the best martial art movies of all time. Bloodsport 2 does not have the classic feel that Bloodsport has, nor does Daniel Bernhardt fill Van Damme's shoes, and the villain Demon (played by Ong Soon Han) does not come close to the on-screen presence of Bolo Yeung. What Bloodsport 2...
Published on August 22, 2006 by dominion_ruler

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Decent Sequel to Blood Sport.
When I got this out I wasn't expecting much at all. But I was pleasantly surprised at what I got. It is well structured film (like a real 80's style with a distinct beginning, middle and end not like crappy shallow 90's films which just meander along and feel really empty) Daniel Bernhardt is really charming, a good fighter and looks strikingly similar to Van Damme in...
Published on September 14, 2001 by sam_van_damme


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars best fight scenes ever, August 22, 2006
This review is from: Bloodsport 2 (DVD)
The first Bloodsport will always be the best of the series, and probably remains as one of the best martial art movies of all time. Bloodsport 2 does not have the classic feel that Bloodsport has, nor does Daniel Bernhardt fill Van Damme's shoes, and the villain Demon (played by Ong Soon Han) does not come close to the on-screen presence of Bolo Yeung. What Bloodsport 2 does have over the original is the best tournament you will ever see in a movie. For a good 30 minutes throughout the film, you get some of the best choreography ever done, well editing and camera angles, and long fights that are just enjoyable to watch and appreciate. The story to Bloodsport 2 is nothing to write home about, but as far as fights, the beginning to the end of his film has nothing but continuous fights (both in and out of the tournament). The final fight between Alex (Bernhardt) and Ong Soon Han is actually pretty good, maybe better than Van Damme and Chong Li in the first Bloodsport.

If you are looking for a good all around movie in the Bloodsport series, look towards the first Bloodsport. If you don't care about story and famous actors and just want really good fights, Bloodsport 2 is the best in the series. Check out Bloodsport 3 too - its pretty lame throughout but the tournament is pretty dang good too. As for Bloodsport 4, ouch.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Decent Sequel to Blood Sport., September 14, 2001
By 
"sam_van_damme" (Dunedin, New Zealand

DUNEDIN New Zealand) - See all my reviews

This review is from: Bloodsport 2 (DVD)
When I got this out I wasn't expecting much at all. But I was pleasantly surprised at what I got. It is well structured film (like a real 80's style with a distinct beginning, middle and end not like crappy shallow 90's films which just meander along and feel really empty) Daniel Bernhardt is really charming, a good fighter and looks strikingly similar to Van Damme in some shots. It has one of the best chessy training scenes like the one in kickboxer. The fight scenes are well edited and well shot, so they are easy to watch and not to close-up. For fans of 80's cheese (even if this is a 90's film) and lots of mano a mano fight scenes this should fit nicely in your collection.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "You and me. Soon, only me!", November 22, 2009
By 
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This review is from: Bloodsport 2 (DVD)
Released eight years after the original film, the follow-up to the undisputed jewel of all karate B-movies sees Swiss-born martial artist Daniel Bernhardt given the unenvied task of trying to live up to Jean-Claude Van Damme's career-launching performance in the first Bloodsport. Does he succeed? The answer depends on how big of a fan you are of Van Damme and his initial karate masterpiece. The movie certainly has its faults (and sadly, these don't include the gloriously cheesy over-the-top aspects of its predecessor), but as far as being a low-budget, tournament-based fighting movie, this one has all the credentials to be an unrecognized gem.

The story: told in flashback by wizened karate teacher Sun (James Hong, Big Trouble in Little China), the tale follows thief-turned-fighter Alex Cardo (Bernhardt, The Matrix Reloaded) as he is sent to a Thai prison for stealing the prize of the fabled underground Kumite tournament. Trained to harness his internal power by Sun, he leaves jail determined to enter the tournament, prove his honor, and use the prize to buy his teacher's freedom.

The cast is pretty neat: in addition to Bernhardt and Hong, there's Pat Morita (The Karate Kid series) as the tournament beneficiary, bodybuilder Ong Soo Han (Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story) as the villainous fan favorite, and Nicholas Hill (Death Match) and Ron Hall (Triple Impact) as Alex's tournament buddies/opponents. Donald "Tiny" Gibb returns in his role from the first film, but he makes no reference to the previous outing or Frank Dux; he's also not quite as funny as during the first time around and doesn't really get to fight. Also, while certainly tough and evil, Ong Soo "Demon" Han can't really live up to Bolo Yeung's presence in the original film. Daniel Bernhardt, however, gives a great physical effort during his maiden voyage in film and makes every fight of his count, as though his future in show business were resting on the quality of this film.

We also have Philip Tan as fight choreographer to thank for this. Rest assured, there is a lot of fighting to be found here - maybe even more than in the first film - and while not all of it is great, a lot of it is above average. The choreography is solid at worst and gorgeous at best - especially that of any fight scene involving Ron Hall. The tournament encounters take a while to get good, and are every once in a while they're punctuated by nonsensical pose-striking and other immature little add-ons (e.g. the monkey fighter who performs to soundbites of an actual monkey shrieking), but by and large, the fighting lives up to the predecessing matches and then some. Fans of "Bloodsport" who can't help but compare the two films will note that's there's a decisive decrease in the emotional content of the fisticuffs and no cool song plays along to the visceral montages. This leaves the film a bit plainer than is healthy for a low-budget flick like this, but the fights can't be dragged down.

James Hong's trademarked "wise old Asian" routine carries his scenes, and he does an excellent job of validating the movie dramatically in between all of the fighting. Fans of these kinds of films ought not be without it, for "Bloodsport 2" has it where it counts and ought to be in the video collection of anybody who values talent and athleticism over an obvious budget.
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5.0 out of 5 stars I'm a big martial arts fan. And I know what I like!!, June 23, 1999
By A Customer
I don't care what anyone says. This is the best martial arts movie ever. I say it is way better than the original. Amazing and stunning performance of Daniel Bernhardt. I wish someone would teach me how to do the "iron hand"!! I can't wait to see Bloodsport 3. It'll be even better than this amazing sequal. Daniel Bernhardt rules!! And you can tell him I said that. I give this movie 1,000,000,000 stars!! ********, etc. That's what I say to the world man!! Especially the producers of the Bloodsport movies. Keep it real!!
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4.0 out of 5 stars Classic Cheesy Martial Arts - Guilty Pleasure Viewing, April 10, 1999
By A Customer
This is the type of movie no one admits to liking, but they watch it every time they see it. Much like listening to Monica Lewinsky, you just can't pull away. It is so satisfying to listen to Alex chant out his guttural "Haaahhhhh." Give in to the pleasure, and watch this movie again and again and again and......
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5.0 out of 5 stars Best Martial Arts sequences I have ever seen, March 9, 1999
By A Customer
The story is a classic, meaning you have seen it a hundred times before. To quote the film "there was a time when even the good were bad" Some people might call it corny but I love. Daniel Burnheart the star is a thief who ends up in jail before he finds himself through the aid of the proverbial wise old man. He redeems himself through rigorous training in the "Iron Hand" and then sets about writing the wrongs he had done. But all of this is immaterial because the films is about incredible material arts, fantastic displays which made me watch it over and over again and which make me say that this is the greatest martial arts I have seen on film to date, and believe me I have seen many such films. Enjoy!!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Better than the Original, March 8, 1999
By A Customer
This something that can be said of few sequals. The plot of this one is better than the first movie, but still weak. The main character is a thief who meets a martial arts master in jail. The master teaches him the meaning of honor, as well as the amazingly deadly super-secret invicible technique seen in too many martial arts movies (like every single Karate kid movie), which in this case the "The Iron Hand." The main character is released from jail, and enters the Kumite, an underground tournament, to honor his teacher and defeat the ubiquitous evil man-monster (who I suspect spoke no English. His one line sounded like he was reciting something verbatim). Donald Gibb (Ogre from Revenge of the Nerds) returns as Ray, the biker-brawler, who now coaches fighters. The fighting is much better than the first movie, displaying a variety of martial arts including the Brazillian art Capoeira, monkey-style Kung Fu, and Muy Thai. This really the only reason to watch the Bloodsport movies: to see the dazzling variety of arts portrayed. You almost hate to see any of them lose. Except for the bad guy, of course. There is a third Bloodsport movie now in video. Don't bother. It reeks.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Laughably bad., September 27, 1999
By A Customer
Save your money, this movie was a bomb. If you like goofing on poor projects that take themselves too seriously, then by all means, reserve 87 minutes. The star of this mess acts and looks like Van Damme but simply falls far short of the star of the original. As for "Ogre" from Revenge of the Nerds, I wanted to jump through the screen and fight him! Like that chick would have went for him...give me a break!!
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Blood Sport Rules!!!!!, March 12, 2006
By 
D. GEESAMAN (Oil Country (Iraq)) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bloodsport 2 (DVD)
Let's face it, TBS won't even show this. We've all seen Blood Sport 30 times on TBS, and it's good. Now, I've never seen this movie, but looking at the cover, it sucks. There's no action on the cover. Van Damme made one good movie, and blood sport was it. Now Daniel Bernhardt tries to jump on and ruins everything. It's like watching The Karate Kid III, after Ralphie grew up. Don't read the reviews for this. Look at the cover and hit yourself. Continue hitting yourself until you realize you were about to make a horrible mistake. You'd be better spending your money on Howard the Duck.
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2 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Daniel Bernhardt must be the cutest karate kid of all!!!!, December 13, 2004
By 
Dan Fan "Dan Fan" (St. Croix, Virgin Islands) - See all my reviews
Who cares about this guy's upper thighs and all that, Daniel Bernhardt has got ot be the cutest karate kid in the world.You go Danny boy!!!!!!!!!! Buy this movie is what I say.And for that guy who talked about the thigh,The world needs to see yours!
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