Director: Lucas Lowe
Cast: Loren Avedon, Keith Vitali, Joseph Campanella, Rion Hunter, Mark Russo, Luke Askew, David Michael Sterling, Wanda Acuna, Philip Benson, Sherrie Rose
Running Time: 101 min.
By Martin Sandison
Scott Adkins Youtube series Art of Action certainly kept me entertained throughout much of this hellish year, as Adkins interviewed many legendary action filmmakers, such as Richard Norton and Dolph Lundgren. Each revealed how they train, and stories about their adventures in the movie industry. Seeing behind the scenes footage of Norton vs Sammo Hung in Twinkle, Twinkle Lucky Stars, one of the greatest fights ever filmed, is gold. The episode that really resonated with me was Adkins interview with Loren Avedon, who is easily one of the most neglected action stars of the golden age of martial arts cinema. He comes across as a really nice and humble, funny guy. He also isn’t afraid to show his emotion, such as when Adkins compliments him at the end, and he exclaims that he’s tearing up. Emotionally honest people appeal to me, and the world needs more of them. The interview made me want to rewatch Loren’s early forays into the film industry in the guise of No Retreat, No Surrender 2 and 3.
As a kid I had the first and third films in the series, and watched them to death, so this was a true nostalgia fest. As many of you will know, the special nature of these films lies in the fact that producer Ng See Yuen was in charge, and the movies feel like Hong Kong productions, but shot in America. Ng can lay claim to have discovered Jackie Chan, Hwang Jang Lee, and many others. With the first NRNS, he was the one to discover Van Damme, and that end fight has the muscles from Brussels in his youthful prime, under the masterful eye of Corey Yuen Kwai. For me those are his best fights ever. The 2nd movie replaced Van Damme and Kurt Mckinney with Avedon and Matthias Hues respectively, and the rumour goes Van Damme was too scared of being in the Cambodian Jungle filming location so backed out of the movie. Silly bugger, but yeah his next movie was Bloodsport. Go figure. NRNS2 is memorable for a number of reasons, like the match up between Cynthia Rothrock and Hwang Jang Lee, and of course the end fight Hues vs Avedon, plus it has a pretty cool Rambo-style feel. Continue reading
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