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Cast:
Cynthia
Rothrock
Richard
Norton
Patrick
Muldoon
Ron
Vreeken
Frans
Tumbaun
Action:
Glenn
Ruehland
Producer:
Donald
Paul Pemrick
Kevin
Reidy
Director:
Guy
Norris
Score:
    
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RAGE
AND HONOUR II: HOSTILE TAKEOVER
AKA:
Rage And Honor 2
Year:
1992 Reviewer: Tony
Ryan
In
the history of B-movie television, one name is sure to take
pride of place: Cynthia Rothrock. She has had a score of
successful straight-to-video actioners throughout the 80's and
90's. For us Hong Kong fans however, she will be best
remembered for quality outings such as 'Righting
Wrongs' and 'Yes,
Madam'. Alongside her in this flick is another fine Gwailo
villain, and B-movie star: Richard Norton.
Surprisingly,
it is Norton who gets a chance to shine here, taking up the
greatest amount of screen time, and impressing in the fight
sequences. Rothrock plays second fiddle, and barely appears
for the middle half-hour. As with most American Martial Arts
movies of this era, the choreography is by no means up to the
equivalent Hong Kong standard, following the slow and steady
heavy-handed approach expected. That said, Norton gets a rare
chance to show of some of his kicking ability as well as his
fighting philosophy during a training sequence. He certainly
appears like a guy you wouldn't want to mess with - backed up
by his real life celebrity bodyguard credentials. The
choreography on the film was done by Glenn Ruehland, who
appears here as a henchman, but also appeared as a fighter
opposite Norton in the awful 'Kick
Fighter' - which I presume he also choreographed.
Fortunately, this is nowhere near as dire as that poor excuse
for a film!
A
definite improvement over part 1, and other similar fare such
as 'China
O'Brien' - it makes for an adequate 90 minutes viewing -
but ultimately reminds us why we love HK fighting so much
more. It's a shame Norton didn't appear in more HK actioners,
or quality mainstream roles, as he certainly has the charisma,
looks and the moves to outdo people like Van Damme or Seagal.
As
a side note - the video I am reviewing this from is around 8
years old, but was distributed by none other than Medusa (parent
company of HKL) and it would be interesting to know if they
still own the rights for this and similar films. However, I
doubt they would give them the same stellar DVD treatment that
they afford their HK classics.
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