In 1986 Hong Kong film director Corey Yuen made a breakthrough martial arts movie titled No Retreat, No Surrender, which became highly successful and introduced Jean-Claude Van Damme to the world. While I dont think the film stands up to Yuen's better pictures like Yes, Madam! (1985) or Righting Wrongs (1986), it had such a big impact that it created a series of films, most of them unofficial or unconnected to the original one.
Today's subject is the second part of the series, that's completely independent and might as well be titled something else because it has zero narrative connection to the first film. In fact it had other titles elsewhere like Raging Thunder and Karate Tiger 2: Raging Thunder.
No Retreat, No Surrender 2 was released in 1987 and starred Loren Avedon, Max Thayer and Cynthia Rothrock. Rothrock does not play a huge part in the movie and her screen time is limited, but she shows off her skills enough for this film to fit into the blog's theme.
The plot follows Scott Wylde (Avedon) visiting Vietnam in order to reunite with his best friend and teacher Mac Jarvis (Thayer) but instead finds Terry (Rothrock), Mac's ex. Scott then meets up with Mac because his girlfriend was kidnapped by Soviets and the two of them go to rescue her. Another Rambo-knock off plot that serves as an excuse to show jungle action and lot's of shootouts.
Cynthia Rothrock's character starts out as a sidelined former lover and eventually joins in on the action later in the picture when she saves the main duo from some bad guys, only to have a small chat with them and share some screen time in the final battle. Nothing too fancy but Yuen found a way to incorporate her, even if it is somewhat shoehorned and she doesnt do a whole lot.
She also falls under the damsel in distress trope for the first time (Perhaps second time, if you even count Fight to Win to fit into that), something Rothrock usually avoided for many pictures. However, this is sort of an excuse to give us some action moments with her kicking bad guys because her hands are tied, this also leads to a pretty well done confrontation with an enemy and a highly powerful big baddie. So the trope isn't played completely straight here and serves to raise the stakes. Take that for what you will.
The biggest problem I have with this picture seems to be the same as with Yuen's direction of the first film, he seems to be adapting to the very straightforward and streamlined way of making movies in Hollywood, as opposed to the slapdash narratives of Hong Kong cinema, always diverging and moving constantly, this movie never allows for the beauty in the action to settle in, nor does it deliver a great and nuanced story, it's trapped somewhere in between the two styles but never achieving either of them successfully.
I actually enjoyed this one more than the first one, it features more effective comedic bits, the storyline it's slightly more engaging and the actual fights are more fun to watch than in the original one. It doesn't have the abundant dull moments of wooden acting from the first film but it's also far from being a complete improvement as seemingly Yuen was still struggling to bring any worthwhile quality from his older films into these two films in the No Retreat series. I gotta say I enjoy the strictly Hong Kong affairs a lot more.
There's also a very bittersweet ending, in typical Yuen fashion, that would be completely absent if this were to be a regular American action movie.
While Yuen brings his skills and craft to the project I can't help but to feel it's somewhat lacking compared to his previous hits, it's not as free and loose as I would have wanted it too. It's well directed but it's not as interesting as Yes Madam! or Righting Wrongs from a visual and narrative standpoint. It's also possible that this is because the writers were not involved in those earlier Hong Kong movies Yuen did.
It's passable but far from great. We have seen the director do better.
Funny thing is that out of all of these early Cynthia Rothrock pictures, this one might have actually been the most influential and one of the defining projects in her career. I say this because this is her last collaboration with filmmaker Corey Yuen. This was also the film that inspired Ed Boon to create the character of Sonya Blade in Mortal Kombat in 1992, at least according to IMDB, since I have yet to find proof that it was this exact movie, most sources say Cynthia was the inspiration but they never mention specific movies.