Brad Spyder flies to Hawaii to uncover a web of bribery, betrayal and lies. When Spyder finds his partner dead, a cat and mouse game between killer and cop begins.Brad Spyder flies to Hawaii to uncover a web of bribery, betrayal and lies. When Spyder finds his partner dead, a cat and mouse game between killer and cop begins.Brad Spyder flies to Hawaii to uncover a web of bribery, betrayal and lies. When Spyder finds his partner dead, a cat and mouse game between killer and cop begins.
Paul Holmes
- Roderick Pendleton
- (as Paul Holme)
John P. Dulaney
- Chief of Police O'Donnel
- (as John Dulaney)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaKenny Rodgers was initially casted as the chief of police O'Donnell, but the studio had to let him go due to his persistence in singing his lines.
- ConnectionsEdited from Silk (1986)
Featured review
On a good day, BLACKBELT II would get two stars instead of one. The film has some B-movie charm to it and, realistically, isn't the worst you can go when it comes to low-budget action pictures. Nevertheless, the technical laziness and storyline hodgery of Blake Bahner's guns & karate vehicle weigh in on my nerves enough that I don't feel very generous. Chances are you've never heard of this movie before now, and with good reason: there is absolutely nothing special about the film, leading it to languish in utter obscurity.
The story: When the partner of renegade cop Brad Spyder (Bahner) is murdered while investigating the reappearance of his thought-dead brother in Hawaii, he makes it his mission to find out what happened and discovers a deadly crime syndicate trying to swindle money out of a desperate father (Paul Holme)...
The meat of the plot is that this syndicate (led by Gary "Skinner" Rooney and Michael "Friedkin" Vlastas) has promised the aforementioned father the return of his son, who went missing in Vietnam, but plan to trick him with the false testament of a fake POW before stealing his money. The idea has some potential, but it's presented in such a convoluted manner that few viewers will be troubled to continue to follow its development after the first half-hour. There's a political half-statement regarding the expendability of soldiers and the facilitation of a theory that, when too many soldiers deserted the military in Vietnam, they were declared MIA to cover up the embarrassment. Weird.
However, what kills the movie dead is its poor production. Far too many scenes are shot under dark lighting and have a bleak, washed-out look that makes this 1993 film seem like it was made in 1980. Expect incorrectly-synched sound effects galore. Worse still is the movie's atrocious editing, which not only cuts every shot half a second too early but also denies the film any ebb or flow via chronic inconsistencies between shots and a general lack of comprehensible pace. This carries over to the action scenes, which were the movie's last chance at any cinematic worth. A combination of bloody-but-unremarkable shootouts and worthless fistfights disappoints something awful. Blake Bahner has some decent kicks and more or less looks the part of the next Van Damme-wannabe, but save for so-so brawl he has with Gary Rooney at the end of the picture, the four fights either make dreadful overuse of the "many shots, one strike, quick edit" technique or are simply executed so lifelessly that it's very difficult to care who wins.
With the exception of "the jolly evil fat man of Filipino exploitation cinema" Vic Diaz, the cast is made up almost exclusively of bit-players and the acting is roundly questionable. The subliminal weirdness of the story and how the movie and the wonky production values might ultimately appeal to hardcore B-movie lovers, but this film clearly isn't for me. Rest assured, it has no connection beyond its title with the original Don Wilson outing, therein eliminating its final glimmer of possible intrigue. Continue to ignore this movie; it might as well not even exist.
The story: When the partner of renegade cop Brad Spyder (Bahner) is murdered while investigating the reappearance of his thought-dead brother in Hawaii, he makes it his mission to find out what happened and discovers a deadly crime syndicate trying to swindle money out of a desperate father (Paul Holme)...
The meat of the plot is that this syndicate (led by Gary "Skinner" Rooney and Michael "Friedkin" Vlastas) has promised the aforementioned father the return of his son, who went missing in Vietnam, but plan to trick him with the false testament of a fake POW before stealing his money. The idea has some potential, but it's presented in such a convoluted manner that few viewers will be troubled to continue to follow its development after the first half-hour. There's a political half-statement regarding the expendability of soldiers and the facilitation of a theory that, when too many soldiers deserted the military in Vietnam, they were declared MIA to cover up the embarrassment. Weird.
However, what kills the movie dead is its poor production. Far too many scenes are shot under dark lighting and have a bleak, washed-out look that makes this 1993 film seem like it was made in 1980. Expect incorrectly-synched sound effects galore. Worse still is the movie's atrocious editing, which not only cuts every shot half a second too early but also denies the film any ebb or flow via chronic inconsistencies between shots and a general lack of comprehensible pace. This carries over to the action scenes, which were the movie's last chance at any cinematic worth. A combination of bloody-but-unremarkable shootouts and worthless fistfights disappoints something awful. Blake Bahner has some decent kicks and more or less looks the part of the next Van Damme-wannabe, but save for so-so brawl he has with Gary Rooney at the end of the picture, the four fights either make dreadful overuse of the "many shots, one strike, quick edit" technique or are simply executed so lifelessly that it's very difficult to care who wins.
With the exception of "the jolly evil fat man of Filipino exploitation cinema" Vic Diaz, the cast is made up almost exclusively of bit-players and the acting is roundly questionable. The subliminal weirdness of the story and how the movie and the wonky production values might ultimately appeal to hardcore B-movie lovers, but this film clearly isn't for me. Rest assured, it has no connection beyond its title with the original Don Wilson outing, therein eliminating its final glimmer of possible intrigue. Continue to ignore this movie; it might as well not even exist.
- The_Phantom_Projectionist
- May 11, 2015
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Spyder - Ein Mann nimmt Rache
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content