Shootfighter II (1996) Poster

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6/10
"Shootfighter II" is just as good as the first one.
tarbosh2200014 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
"Shootfighter II" is just as good as the first one.

Shingo and the gang are back for more of the World's deadliest sport: (Which is Shootfighting, duh.)

When the movie opens, we see some familiar pants. You've heard of "Blockbuster Pants", Now there are Shootfighting pants. As you remember from the first movie, they are black sweatpants with big pink patches. The man wearing the pants is running from the new shootfighting ringleader in Florida, Lance. He is an ambitious and deadly man.

Cut to a James Brolin doppelganger, a cop named Rawlins (Chase Randolf) asking the question "Do you know anything about a shootfighting ring in Miami?" to Nick, Ruben and Shingo. Rawlins wants to go undercover and bust the new shootfighting ring because his son died in it. Rawlins also recruits a dock workin' badass named Shark who resembles a lost Swayze brother. An uneasy alliance is forged between Nick, Ruben, and Shark.

Nowhere is this tension better exemplified than in the scene where Ruben notices Shark's tattoo. Ruben glibly notes that it looks "Like a tuna fish to me. " whereupon Shark delivers the immortal line (groan) "It's a shark, buttwipe" (groan again) also groan-worthy is Shark's inexplicable nicknaming Ruben "Waterboy" for the rest of the movie.

The new gang enters Lance's strongman competition where it eventually leads to an underground shootfighting match. They fight baddies such as a black guy who looks like "Dee Jay" from the then current game "Street Fighter", A guy who eats raw meat, and Sargon, Anatoli, Khan, and Grunner.

The audience for "The best entertainment on the planet!" consists of 7 or 8 bloodthirsty rowdy jackasses, one of whom closely resembles Singer-Songwriter-Pianist Randy Newman. Who knew?

There is a subplot involving Ruben and some British waitress who works for Lance. She has a very nice apartment for a single woman on a shootfighting waitress salary. They go to a party where one song continuously plays: "Take me to your house", and boy is it catchy.

In the end, Lance kidnaps Shingo, a terrible secret is revealed and Rawlins joins the fray in the shootfighterific climax. Will Lance make his casino? Will his assistant "Joseph Stalin" get his comeuppance? Will Shingo fight? Find out the answers to these questions and much, much, MUCH more in this rousing sequel where the action is as bone-crunching as the dialogue is flat. It caps off with an awesome freeze frame and thus concluding this Bolotastic sequel for the ages!
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6/10
Some comical fights, but overall pretty good
sveknu26 September 2005
Shootfighter 2 is better than the first movie. This is mainly because of the fight scenes, who are pretty good. They're nowhere near as brutal as the scenes in the first movie were, but they're in fact better all the way through. Also, it's more focus on Bolo Yeung in this movie than in the previous. He still isn't the lead, but I really liked his performance in this one. Of course, this is not an A-grade movie and it has it's unintentionally funny situations. Some of the fights (and fighters) are for example just comical, but that's just a proof that the movie doesn't take itself that seriously. A good and entertaining movie.
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5/10
Van Damme meets WWE
r-c-s20 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This mediocre movie's sets mostly remind me of the cheapest WWE "sport entertainment"; people supposed to be killing machines look and act more like WWE/WWF freaks from the 1980s. The storyline is ridiculous: undercover police chief ( say Steve Martin gets balls ) and rat-faced latino heel blackmail bunch of well-meaning fighters into a sting operation to bust a murderous ring whose henchman is a 150kg, 1m55 Chinese steroid Michelin Man whose looks make Bolo Yeung look like Alain Delon in his best days, go figure. This movie tries to copy here & there to look larger than life...the latino heel, a horse faced, long haired fighter who probably was thought to imitate the cheap Lorenzo Lamas flicks of the late 80s...Zabka plays the cute boy ala Van Damme...the movie fails on all but one respect: fight scenes make up most of it and the filler (acting, storyline, character development...) is kept to a bare minimum. Nice to see Bolo Yeung and shame he got so little screen time.
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Very Solid Film
Invictus13 June 2000
I liked this movie a lot;it had solid martial arts action, and Bolo's final fight made the whole thing worth watching. He is the master, his style is just so entertaining and a pleasure to watch. Yes, I wish he would had more scenes, but the movie was building up to it, we all knew the reluctant master was going in...and he delivered. Zabka was pretty good, it was such a nostalgic moment, seeing him fighting on screen again. Of course, the Capoeira fighter was another highlight I must say, being a practitioner myself. He made things a little more spicier than the movie otherwise would have been. There's a gratuitous love scene which is always nice, and I especially liked the arrogant bodyguard. Overall a solid movie and a lot of action.
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2/10
Three words: "Straight to Video"
Laner21 February 1999
A bad bad movie... terrible plot, hinges on Bolo Yeung's charater, but he speaks maybe 20 words in the entire movie and only has one fight scene - still in great shape considering he was also in the kung fu classic "Enter The Dragon" Interesting to see William Zabka ("Johnny" from The Karate Kid) in another martial-arts role.
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3/10
If you're a sequel and you know it, clap your hands
I_Ailurophile3 July 2022
For whatever differences they may bear, a large majority of second-tier (or lower) fighting movies like this have at least one thing in common, and it's that any notion of narrative is a light, thin pretense to showcase martial arts or some level of melee combat. There's absolutely nothing wrong with this; it's part of what makes them fun, even at their goofiest. In the case of 'Shootfighter II,' one rather wishes the plot were deemphasized even more, as the exposition that sends our trio of protagonists across the country is very bland, if not also questionable. Pretty much every story beat we get feels distinctly contrived, and there are flourishes adorning the feature that are outright gauche - chiefly, the WWE-like bombast and gimmicks that fighters display before and even during matches. In the grand tradition of many an "okay, sure" sequel, we get a few returning characters and cast members, and a new writing team and director.

Camerawork and editing is a little too exuberant during action sequences, somewhat reducing our sight of utmost visceral (and actual) impact as shots cut away early. We're also treated to a plethora of reaction shots from the audience, to an extent that's ham-handed and over the top. A vast preponderance of the dialogue and scene writing is pointedly overdone or cliched, and the plot is little more than perfunctory on a very basic level. Meanwhile, I don't know whether the flat, unconvincing performances are attributable more to inability of the cast, deficient direction from Paul Ziller, or some other combination of factors, but the acting here is less than inspired. For good measure throw in gratuitous nudity and a sex scene, and to some degree reduce the actual amount of fighting to fill the runtime.

Don't get me wrong, 'Shootfighter II' isn't completely awful. Yet it's undeniably one or two steps down (or more) even from its predecessor of three years prior. More to the point, it's a sequel that screams, dances, and flashes neon lights to let you know it's here, and it matters too - instead of, you know, possessing mindful craft and value that speaks for itself. It's a movie that's defined almost entirely by tropes, and tawdry, unnecessary inclusions that are intended to heighten our engagement, but instead only threaten to break it. Oh, and arguably even more so than in the first movie, Bolo Yeung mostly goes to waste.

It was never going to be great, but it could have been good. Yet 'Shootfighter II' doesn't make nearly enough effort where it would count the most, and tries too hard to compensate for it in the most ignoble of ways, down to the very end. Even if you're a diehard fan of someone involved, you don't need to go out of your way to see it; leave this for those who are too curious for their own good, and even then, only on a very, very lazy day.
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3/10
Like, wha'ts the deal, no blood?
T MAN24 February 1999
After seeing Shootfighter 1, and the buckets of blood they shed, I was ready for another rousing jaunt of open handed heart massage, and chiropractics in a cage. But nooooooo, this was like the Barney version of the first movie, with that lamer from the Karate kid. At least Bolo Yeung still kicks booty, although he needs to do more movies like Bloodsport and Caddyshack.
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6/10
Bad casting and no blood ruin the film!
leewinchester-5733527 February 2021
Now, this is my kind of movie, 80's/90's cheesey martial arts film with not very good acting, bad lines but some decent fight scenes.

I won't go too much into the story (revenge etc etc) to avoid spoilers.

I love films like King of the kickboxers, shootfighter 1, China o Brien etc so I know what I'm getting heading into this sort of movie.

The first issue as stated by others is the lack of blood, the first movie was decent with the amount of blood and gore etc

The second issue and by far and away the worst for me is Joe Son, from what I hear he's not a nice guy for real but he is a terrible actor and I absolutely despised him, needed something more along the lines of Tong Po to add a bit of fear but this Son guy was just a joke.
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2/10
Don't bother
Leofwine_draca29 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
SHOOTFIGHTER 2 is a dreadful little no budget kung fu flick that's notable only for featuring the great Bolo Yeung in a supporting role as the mentor to the film's youthful, powerless and uninteresting hero characters. Yeung generally looks on impassively from the sidelines and speaks a few words of dialogue but otherwise his role is negligible. It's a pity, as the rest of the film is absolute junk, with barely existent plotting, tedious pacing, wooden acting from the whole cast, and lame fight scenes. Definitely a struggle to sit through, despite fan favourite Bolo.
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2/10
Shooting blanks
fmarkland3228 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This time our protagonists (Bolo Yeung, William Zabka and Michael Bernardo) from the first film are forced to fight by a police captain who's son was killed by a monster who finances to the death fights. Unintentional hilarity is what saves this horrid fight flick, this time the gore is gone, the villain is lame and the movie rarely strays from the worn out cliches in this predictable and braindead chop socky flick. It's amazing how much this movie wastes a legitimately good actor in Zabka (Watch Cobra Kai sometime) and wastes the screen presence of Bolo Yeung. Honestly this is pretty much a rehash of part 1 and extremely poorly made. Ziller directs his actors in the dialogue scenes so awkwardly that it often feels like amateur night improv. The fights are lame and the whole movie lacks a narrative to hold these lame fight scenes together, here too Ziller badly directs these fights. Indeed, the only real entertainment comes from how laughably stupid it all is.

* Out Of 4- (Bad)
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4/10
Disappointing!
GillesNuytens20 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
While the first movie was ok, with some plot holes and non sense scenes, it at least succeeded to give the main characters some developpment and give empathy/emotion (the relationships with the girls, Shingo's mom, etc) to them. Altough with an abrupt ending, it had something between Bloodsport and Karate Kid (not only with its cast). But this one doesn't have anything of that! All the drama, character developpment started in the first movie is wiped out and worst, they came up with an all made up character (Eddie) out of their magical pocket, supposedly a well known guy (friend?) they met in the first film, except that he doesn't exist in the first film! So, it felt a bit awkward here. We would have expected some follow-up with what happened between the boys and their girlfriends (Nick's sister, which was Ruben's girlfriend) but nothing at all, not even a mention of them. Did Ruben broke up with her? We don't know but suppose yes as he goes with another girl. He wouldn't cheat on her in front of her brother! And then, they came up making Joe Son as the brother of Bolo Yeung. We've already seen him in the very first scene of the 1st film and it didn't feel like he was his brother (which he wasn't supposed to be at the time). It could have been a good film but poorly done unfortunately. Good to see Bolo Yeung and William Zabka, but that's about it. The scene were the girl wants to call the police in front of the armed guys was ridiculous, who would do that? At least, wait that they are away! We don't really feel any emotions here. To me it's a fail. Good point with the musical theme by Alex Wilkinson tough. A shame it's never been released on CD.
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This movie was shot, but it should have been buried, too.
Mitch-382 April 1999
Ok. No law states that anyone appearing in a Martial Arts flick, must be endowed with copious amounts of acting talent. Most of those who appreciate these films, watch for the fight sequences, and how well they are done. I, myself, love a great actioner. The storyline with Bolo Yeung, and characters "Ruben" and "Nick", is easy enough to digest. As I mentioned, this is not Shakespeare. Yet, this "movie" has no excitement, whatsoever. The actors try, but the fighting sequences were as exciting as watching dust settle on a lampshade.

This, plus ho-hum production values, equals one movie that could replace SLEEP-EZE as America's main relief from insomnia.
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5/10
Didn't I just watch the exact same story in the 1993 predecessor movie?...
paul_haakonsen28 December 2022
Well, if you have seen the 1993 movie "Shootfighter: Fight to the Death", then you have essentially also already seen the 1996 sequel "Shootfighter II", because they were one and the same movie. Yup, that was the extend of what writers Greg Mellott and Peter Shaner mustered to do here, just tweaked the setting a bit, but the storyline was basically the same.

So the writing in "Shootfighter II" was lazy, really lazy. And that makes "Shootfighter II" a somewhat dull movie experience in comparison to the 1993 original movie. Sure, "Shootfighter II" was watchable, and especially so if you haven't seen the 1993 predecessor.

"Shootfighter II" sees Bolo Yeung, William Zabka and Michael Bernardo return to reprise their characters and roles from the first movie, and that was one of the reasons why "Shootfighter II" was bearable to sit through. And this 1996 sequel also sees Brett Baxter Clark added to the roster, as well as Marc Macaulay, so there are some familiar faces on the cast list.

The movie, however, had Joe Son playing Lance Stuart, the main villain in the movie. I am not familiar with Joe Son, but talk about a miscast actor for the main bad guy. He was not able to portray a serious character, much less be taken seriously as a villain, so that took away a lot from the movie.

There were some good enough fight scenes throughout the course of the 91 minutes that the movie ran for, and they definitely helped make the movie all the more watchable, no doubt about it. And when you sit down to watch a movie such as "Shootfighter II", then it is for the martial arts and the fighting, not for the acting performances.

The 1996 movie "Shootfighter II" is nowhere near as enjoyable as the 1993 movie, especially not if you have seen the 1993 movie. And I did watch them back to back.

My rating of "Shootfighter II" lands on a mediocre five out of ten stars.
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5/10
An Unthrilling Martial Arts Thriller.
P3n-E-W1s322 May 2022
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Shootfighter II; here's the breakdown of my ratings:

Story: 0.75 Direction: 1.00 Pace: 0.75 Acting: 1.00 Enjoyment: 1.25

TOTAL: 4.75 out of 10.00

I rebuked the original Shootfighter, though only slightly, for not possessing an original script. Well, in the sequel, the writers attempt to add intrigue and stratagems. Sadly, neither the writers nor the director makes the film intriguing or engrossing.

The concept of the story is adequate. A police detective, having lost his son to an illegal "Death Match" Shootfight, enlists the help of a few martial artists to bring the killer promoters before the law. It only needs Master Shingo to hear that his brother is running the show, to offer him and his students help. So, off to Miami go Ruben, Nick, Master Shingo, and Shark. Since this martial arts flick has taken a slight detour into the thriller genre, there are a few twists in the tale. However, these suffer heavily from being much-used deceits. So when Detective Rawlins warns his stool-pigeon that if he crosses him, there will be trouble, you're waiting for the cross to come. And, in fact, most things in this thriller are predictable, and that's sad. They had a chance to create a solid and fresh story. What the audience receives, once again, is regurgitated leftovers.

The direction is worse than the original film. At least in that picture, the director knew how to shoot the fight scenes to make them engaging and exciting for the viewer. Paul Ziller, however, doesn't manage to hit the same highs. Most of the action sequences and chases are by the book and are rather dull - Considering the steady pace of the movie, it's not unexpected.

It would have helped massively had they not hired Chase Randolph to play Detective Lew Rawlins. For one thing, he's a Swiss-Cheese walking and talking. His performance lacks the skill, and he is cheesy to the max. I constantly wished one of the fighters would knock that grin right off his mug. Sadly, that never happens. The worst thing is everybody else is okay, so his acting deficiency is obvious, making it more of a distraction and hindrance to the viewer.

If you've watched and enjoyed Shootfighter, then feel free to check out the sequel; you'll probably enjoy it. Though, if you haven't, I'd recommend the original over this tiresome film.

Please feel free to visit my Holding Out For A Hero and The Game Is Afoot lists to see where I ranked ShootfighterII.

Take Care & Stay Well.
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