Bloodsport 3

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Movie
German title Bloodsport 3
Original title Bloodsport III
Country of production United States
original language English
Publishing year 1997
length 92 minutes
Age rating FSK 18
Rod
Director Alan Mehrez
script James Williams
production Alan Mehrez
music Stephen Edwards
camera Kevan Lind
cut Ron Cabreros
occupation

Bloodsport 3 is a 1997 American martial arts film directed by Alan Mehrez . It is a sequel to Bloodsport 2 . Daniel Bernhardt took on the role of Alex Cardo again .

action

The story begins after Alex beat Demon in the Kumite from the second part. Master Sun, who initiated Alex into the discipline of the iron fist , is attacked by ninjutsu fighters and cannot defend himself against the overwhelming number of men. Alex arrives, defeats the majority, and sees Sun die in his arms. He then swears revenge on those who gave the order to kill old David. Alex goes on a search and meets Leung's brother. Alex participates in the kumite again. Sun's brother trains Alex in the toughest discipline, e.g. B. he forces him to catch an arrow. As the film progresses, Alex Cardo discovers that the wealthy businessman Duvalier was responsible for the death of Sun. He decides to pursue the assassination with determination, where he meets the beautiful Crystal. They fall in love when three bandits harass Crystal and Cardo drives them away. Eventually it comes to kumite. Duvalier owns an almost invincible fighter nicknamed The Beast . He wants to get Alex out of the way. Duvalier asks the wrestling star Beast to brutally attack his opponents in order to intimidate Alex. But he's not that easy to impress and bravely fights his way to the final. In the fight against Beast he can defeat him, but also suffers damage to his health.

Reviews

“A superfluous continuation of an already superfluous film. [...] Technically more carefully produced than its predecessor, the film, made up of clichés and clichés from the genre, has little more to offer than oiled muscles and grunting men. "

background

The original version, which was not approved for young people, was shortened by seven minutes in order to make the film accessible to viewers under the age of 18. The film received some very bad reviews; his rating in the IMDb in April 2008 was 3.2 out of 10 possible points.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Bloodsport 3 in the Lexicon of International FilmsTemplate: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used , accessed January 4, 2009