Fighting Spirit (1992) Poster

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3/10
"I never believed there was anything more to this world than what we see..."
The_Phantom_Projectionist25 November 2015
The original THE KING OF THE KICKBOXERS is a hidden gem of B-movie/martial arts filmmaking. In 1993, Black Belt Magazine declared it one of the best fight flicks ever made, and twenty years later, it still holds up well. Oddly enough, two movies claiming to be its sequel were released in the same year a little while after the original's debut. American SHAOLIN was a sequel in name only, featuring no returning performers and a new storyline but a similar production style. And while that film isn't perfect by any means, it does a lot more things right than the piece of junk I'm reviewing here. KING OF THE KICKBOXERS 2 features the return of Loren Avedon as the star, albeit in a different storyline with a much lower standard of action and production.

The story: When fighter Billy Edwards (Sean Donahue) is killed after getting mixed up with a sadistic underground warlord (Ned Hourani), it falls to his best friend David Carster (Avedon) to protect Billy's girlfriend (Michelle Locke) and avenge his death.

I was expecting the bad acting, roundly dreadful as it may be, but I wasn't expecting half of Loren Avedon's lines to be noticeably dubbed by another performer. I was expecting the low-budget, made-in-the-Philippines production, but I wasn't expecting the filmmakers to get basic things like correct scene-to-scene blocking wrong (e.g. a performer somehow travels ten feet between shots to fall off an escarpment). I was expecting the soundtrack to be forgettable, but dang if it doesn't stand out for its invasiveness as a mixture of repetitive lounge music and weird sound effects. And though the movie only runs for approximately 90 minutes, the story feels overlong and convoluted, with strange and unnecessary plot inserts galore, like David being paranormally contact by his dead friend no less than three times . It's just not very engaging.

The same can be said about the majority of the fight action. Though there's no shortage of it with sixteen brawls going on, very few of these are any good. The fighting cast also includes ex-kickboxer Greg Douglass among others, but even with a large collection of talent, the fisticuffs don't amaze: the action is oftentimes sloppy and uncoordinated, as though only the loosest choreography had been planned, and the overlong brawls aren't filmed very dynamically. These faults temporarily lift near the end of the film when Loren Avedon invades the villains' hideout and takes on a horde of thugs in a respectable randori, but the problems return promptly for the two final showdowns.

KING OF THE KICKBOXERS 2 isn't quite so helplessly bad that it deserves a one-star rating, but it's not far off. While the movie may appeal to folks who have grown up on this style of cheap adventure, it cannot hope to match the quality of its predecessor-in-name, even with the lead star at the helm. Leave this one be.
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1/10
Stay the away from this crap!
relicoffayte21 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
When I saw the title "King of the Kickboxers 2" sticking out of the budget bin at the store I was estatic because I consider the first film to be an epic martial arts masterpiece, Loren Avedon was at his best. So I rushed home in the middle of a snowstorm to watch this, and when I got home and popped it in the DVD player it took a whole 5min to make me wish that I was back out on the icy road! This movie is god awful, probably the worst piece of crap I have ever seen. The budget was LOW and usually thats great in my book when it comes to bad action flicks but this was ridiculous, I could have taken 25 bucks, a camera, and gone down to the local dojo and grabbed a random group of guys and would have made a movie 10x what this trash heap was. The acting was beyond terrible from all parties including Avedon, the fighting was horrid and fake as hell, there was no choreography at all, the audio sounded like it was recorded in a bathroom with the microphone off, and the story was pathetic. If anyone had thought that Loren Avedon still had a chance at making a name for himself up until this point than all chance was lost and than buried and than dug up and burned. The only saving grace for me is that I am a fan of Loren Avedon and I consider King of the Kickboxers 1 to be an amazing film.This movie serves no real purpose except if you are looking for something to stick under a wobbly chair leg, if I had spent more than $2.99 Canadian on this trash than I would have really been angry.
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7/10
Great fights, sub-par acting
udar5530 March 2010
David Carster (Loren Avedon) tangles with bad guy Russell (Ned Hourani) and his brother Tony (Greg Douglass) after they kill his best friend Billy (Sean Donahue). Why did they kill Bill? Well, he was an awesome martial artist and they conned him into doing underground fights to pay for his sister's medical bills (from an attack that Russell orchestrated in the first place). Billy finds out the truth and gets angry, naturally, they kill him. But they don't count on Billy's ghost contacting David and telling to him to get revenge. Really!

Alright, a quick history lesson - KING OF THE KICKBOXERS starred Loren Avedon and Billy Blanks. Avedon went on to make this as FIGHTING SPIRIT, which was later renamed KING OF THE KICKBOXERS 2 to cash in on the success of the first film even though this one is unrelated. The director of KOTK made a film called American SHAOLIN. When that hit video, it was called American SHAOLIN: KING OF THE KICKBOXERS 2 to cash in on the success of the first film even though it too is also unrelated. So there are two films called KING OF THE KICKBOXERS 2 and they are both not sequels to the first film. Confused?

So this one is a pure laugh riot. I mean, I was watching it and you would have thought I was taking in a comedy. It reminded me a bit of NO RETREAT, NO SURRENDER with the ghost angle. The acting is very stilted and the dubbing offers some great bits. But like all the other films in the KING OF THE KICKBOXERS world, the fights are well done. Avedon was an accomplished martial artist who always delivered. And having one of the awesome Donahue family members in there is great, even if his screen time is only for 30 minutes. Hourani, who is Arab looking and tall, was a staple in the Philippines action market at the time. Casting the pale, stout Douglass as his brother is funny in itself. Given the location shooting, I also got a good laugh when a cop says he is from the LAPD.
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6/10
Non-stop fighting!
tarbosh220005 May 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Billy Edwards (Donahue) is a young man who trains in Martial Arts and spends a lot of his time training at the gym. When his sister Judith (Michelle Locke in her only credited movie role to date) is assaulted by a gang of no-goodniks and suffers optic nerve damage, the evil Russell Peretti (Hourani) offers him a way to pay her medical bills: underground Punchfighting matches. When Russell and his super-evil brother Tony (Douglass) keep ratcheting up the stakes, as gangsters often do, Billy wants out. Unfortunately, he gets his wish: the baddies off Billy. Billy's friend David Carster (Avedon) then assumes responsibility for Judith, who must wear bandages around her eyes while she recuperates. In a 'spirit' of revenge, David trains hard with Murphy (Beyer) in order to obtain the fighting skills necessary to defeat Russell, Tony and their goons once and for all. But will he have a little supernatural help along the way? Find out...

In this movie at least, Loren Avedon resembles Scott Baio. Sean Donahue bears more than a passing resemblance to pre-Bibleman-era Willie Aames. Coincidence? Fighting Spirit could very well be the Charles in Charge - or Zapped!, if you will - of early-90's low budget Punchfighting movies. This is actually one of the better Avedon outings, he's not unlikable like he is in some other efforts. His character even goes through something of an arc, from smug non-fighter to full-fledged action hero (though it is odd that on the first day of his training, he can already do Van Damme-style splits). And, adding to the feel that this movie is a lot older than it really is, the two of them train to disco music.

The music, generally speaking, is pretty weird. There are a ton of misplaced cues, and a lot of it (which repeats over and over) even seems out of tune. The main theme appears to be nothing more than a slow pick slide over a lightly-amplified electric guitar. So when you're not distracted by the music, you can concentrate on the funny dubbing. Once again, those loud or wacky voices appear. Either the music or the voices are blaring at all times: one of the main positives of the movie is that it is almost non-stop fighting. There's a fight scene seemingly every few minutes, which keeps the attention up.

Sure, it's all pretty downmarket, but it's also fun most of the time. It doesn't seem like the filmmakers were working with the best equipment, but maybe that's all they had in whatever foreign country they were in. Our guess is the Philippines, due to the presences of Nick Nicholson, Ned Hourani, and a bit part by Mike Monty, though fellow Philippines-shot movie mainstay Henry Strzalkowski isn't present. Monty gets raving drunk in the first scene of the movie and isn't seen again; Nicholson is a kickboxing coach who is constantly barking orders at his charges and calls everyone "boy!" All that being said, a police officer identifies himself as "LAPD" - are we supposed to believe this is all taking place in Los Angeles? But silly details like that add to the enjoyment of the movie.

There are not one, but TWO ideas lifted wholesale from Cape Fear (the then-recently released 1991 version, probably), and the Punchfighting audience Billy must fight in front of is rather small, especially for such large sums of cash that are on the line, but, as we've said before, there are many kinds of stupid, and not all stupid is bad stupid. You might say Fighting Spirit is more confused than anything else, because it seems a lot of the wackiness/dumbness resides from its strange take on what someone believes to be American life, and mind-numbing scenes ensue. Once again, that is not a negative criticism. We don't know the country of birth of director John Lloyd, but thanks to this movie and his Ron Marchini vehicle Ninja Warriors (1985), we do know he certainly has an off-kilter sensibility. Despite all odds, it's actually pretty darn entertaining.

Featuring the lounge-type song "Why Must This Be" by Harry Strong, Fighting Spirit may be a bit grimy, but you just have to either enjoy it or look beyond it. Confusingly, this is also known as King of the Kickboxers 2, presumably because of the presence of Avedon, but it has nothing whatsoever to do with the earlier Billy Blanks romp.
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6/10
Felt Cheap a lot....
destroyerwod6 March 2010
OK normally i am not very hard to please when it comes to martial arts movies. I grab a couple beer, get drunk, get in the action and i have a damn good time. Lot of titles voted 3/10 here on IMDb i actually like them a lot and voted 8. But for this one, lets say that it feel like the budget was beyond low. The action sequences are not that bad, but they are certainly not at the level of the ones of the bloodsport or kickboxer franchise. The story is not bad by itself but thats how its tell that make it look weird. You feel that either the character are stupid or very ignorant. But what was the biggest low point was the music, so out of context, didn't match at all. When in movies like Best of the Best 2 you have a very hooking music making you get even more in the movie, here the whole thing didn't match at all to the point it was really annoying. Anyway i would finish saying i saw worst movie, and i was not completely bored by it, but it could have been much better easily with a little work.
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