Bloodfist VIII: Hard Way Out

1996 "There is only one escape for a man who knows too much."
4.3| 1h25m| en| More Info
Released: 29 October 1996 Released
Producted By: Concorde-New Horizons
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A former CIA agent lives a suburban life as a high school teacher with his teen son. When the agent is attacked by former allies because of knowledge he possesses and his son is kidnapped, he is forced back into the business and his son suddenly sees a side of his father that he never knew existed.

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DigitalRevenantX7 Rick Cowen is a shy maths teacher who is raising his son Chris after the death of his wife. Father & son aren't getting along too well but all that changes when a team of hit men make an attempt on their lives. To Chris' amazement, Rick single-handedly wipes out the assassins using some pretty impressive martial arts skills. Rick reveals that he is actually a former CIA agent who took early retirement after a mission he was on went wrong & a target was killed. Fleeing to Ireland, where Rick has some allies, the pair must dodge Italian assassins bent on killing them as revenge for their leader's death as well as the CIA station chief who wants them silenced as they have important information that would pose a threat to his impending promotion as director of the agency.The Bloodfist series has become one of the 1990s' most enduring el cheapo action franchises. Which is a bit on the astounding side as the original film was nothing more than a cheap knockoff of the Jean-Claude Van Damme classic BLOODSPORT only with real life martial arts champions cast as fighters. After the third film, which was the best film in the series & an underrated prison drama, the series turned into a generic action franchise.By the time of Bloodfist VIII: Trained to Kill (also known in some places as Bloodfist VIII: Hard Way Out), the series had largely lost its way. Despite a reasonably watchable seventh entry, the people of Los Angeles must have told Roger Corman that seven Bloodfist films was pushing it as far as it goes. Taking advantage of the Irish tax shelter program at the time, Corman decided to mount a sequel over there.Like the previous film (Bloodfist VII: Manhunt), Trained to Kill is just a routine actioner, nothing more than that. But like Manhunt, the film manages to infuse the already limited formula with some new ideas, some of which had been used in a slightly different format in previous Bloodfist films. The location of Ireland might be somewhat of a novelty but it works wonders for the film, along with some decent fight scenes, car chases, a healthy bodycount & some decent twists that make Trained to Kill the second best film in the entire series.Don "The Dragon" Wilson has come a fair way since the original Bloodfist, here managing to have a reasonable performance (although for some reason his introduction scene as a maths teacher gave me a bad case of the titters (suppressed laughter) given that he does not strike me as an ideal candidate for a high school teacher). That said, he still has the personality of an annoyed pit bull but he does his best in what he probably knew was going to be his last Bloodfist appearance, giving the role the old college try. As for the rest of the cast, John Patrick White looks far too old to be a convincing teenager while the series continues its time-honoured tradition of returnee actors with Jillian McWhirter returning to play the villainess in this one. The climactic fight on the fishing barge, which mixes martial arts, Uzi submachine guns & improvised bombs is an interesting climax although not nearly as brutal as some of the fights in previous films in the series.
Frank Markland Don Wilson stars as George MacReady who kicks into high gear, when his son is kidnapped by CIA agents who are targeting him for death because of his secret identity being blown, now he must fight his ex-comrades and save his son, while not ripping his pants in the process. That is not an unworthy observation, Don Wilson wears jeans so tight they might as well be spandex and it becomes quite believable that Wilson is a true martial artist because somehow he can kick way over his head and do so without once tearing a hole in his pants. If anything else though, Bloodfist VIII is a one man show with Wilson quite invincible against assembly line villains who say everything that villains of this nature do. The one interesting element is that the characters are named after classic actors and directors such as George MacReady, Emeric Pressburger and Michael Powell. Other then that the production values are better this time around although who ever was behind the radio shock effect should be walloped with a tire-iron, overall i'm saying this is the least terrible of the last 4 sequels. But really this is a fifty cent rental at best, once again Don Wilson fans will enjoy this but other then that it holds little appeal. Also John Patrick White has to be the oldest teenager ever.*1/2 out of 4-(Poor)
gridoon "Bloodfist VIII" is about as watchable as any "Part VIII" of a film series could ever hope to be. Not that it has to do anything with the previous entries anyway - is the name "Bloodfist" such a money maker that they couldn't simply release this as "Trained To Kill"? At first, this appears to be an acting stretch for Don Wilson - he is a math teacher with typical problems in his relationship with his teenage son. But don't worry, we soon find out that he is an ex-CIA agent, targeted for death by Italian hit men and even some of his former employers! The one new element here is the Irish setting for much of the action - and apparently someone thought we were too thick to get the fact that we're in Ireland, because there is this "folk" (I don't know how else to describe it) music score that keeps on playing throughout. At least the close-contact fight scenes are mostly good, with Wilson in top form. (**)
Alwood This is a solid martial arts/action thriller that has Don "the Dragon" Wilson as an ex-CIA assassin teaming with his teenage son to track down the men trying to kill them. Easily the best of Wilson's numerous martial arts movies, this one effectively combines good writing, stunt work, action scenes, and editing to create an entertaining film that can be appreciated by action fans.