After he has killed his best friend in an MMA championship match – and was 
thrown out by the officials of his league – guilt-ridden Wes Baylor (Scott 
Adkins) is fighting illegal underground matches in Southeast Asia, clearly 
looking for a way to die but unwilling to do the deed himself.
When one Jonah Aldrich (Robert Knepper) offers Baylor the opportunity for one 
last big fight in Myanmar worth a million dollars, the fighter has vague dreams 
of using that money for some kind of redemption that’ll come in the uncommon 
form of a beach house (don’t ask). Unfortunately, though not terribly surprising 
given the film’s title and prologue, that “fight” isn’t so much a fight but 
rather a big game hunt through a part of Myanmar’s jungle kept free of pesky 
villagers by corrupt military, with Baylor as the prey. If he makes it the 
hundred miles to the border of Thailand, he’s home free with a bag full of 
rubies, supposedly. Of course, the hunting group consisting of Aldrich, his 
partner Madden (Temuera Morrison) and a bunch of rich assholes – killed off too 
early to have any character traits Gigi Velicitat, rich girl in leather pants 
Rhona Mitra, torero Adam Saunders, rich redneck Peter Hardy and wavering rich 
redneck son Sean Keenan, and gamer dude Jamie Timony – have vehicles where 
Baylor is on foot, military assistance, drones, and all kinds of weapons.
Yet that might still not be enough to kill one very angry Baylor, 
particularly once he meets Tha (Ann Truong) in the jungle, the sister of one of 
Aldrich’s former victims, and borrows a cause to fight for apart from mere 
survival from her.
There may be people who think the John Woo directed Jean-Claude Van 
Damme-starring Hard Target didn’t need a very belated direct to 
streaming (home video?) sequel, hell, there may even be people who believe the 
original wasn’t terribly great. Spoilers: both of these groups are wrong, the 
latter even horribly wrong.
This film’s a sequel to Hard Target only very freely anyway; it’s 
simply another Most Dangerous Game variation that found a sexier (or at 
least some decades more modern) title to use, so the producers might just as 
well have called this one a reboot. Director Roel Reiné does clearly love his 
John Woo, too, so the film includes about half a dozen direct homages to certain 
Woo tics used in the original film, naturally including those frigging doves. 
Otherwise, Reiné is no John Woo, but he’s certainly one of the more talented 
guys working in the low budget action sphere at the moment, showing a sense of 
pacing, a clear understanding of how to use the camera to create physical spaces 
for the characters to fight in, and an obvious appreciation for the fighters and 
stunt people involved that uses editing and whooshing noises to emphasise their 
efforts instead of distracting from them.
It does of course help that Scott Adkins is the contemporary king of this 
kind of movie – a decent actor and a great screen fighter, and by now also an 
experienced workhorse who is having a slow year when he’s doing only three films 
in it. The more important parts of the cast are rather great low budget movie 
people, too. Knepper, Mitra and Morrison all have a couple of action scenes to 
sink their teeth into as well as more than enough opportunities for some rather 
delightful scenery chewing.
Speaking of the action, while the film obviously puts the emphasis on the 
very fine martial arts fights, you also get a variety of fun vehicle stunts, a 
bit of shooting, as well as a lot of running; there’s even what I think counts 
as an exploding hut. Reiné does well by all of it.
What further elevates the film about the lower tiers of the contemporary low 
budget action crowd is a script that’s not written around some one shooting day 
cameos and so hangs together well without having to ruin its pacing to 
accommodate Bruce Willis’s need to buy cigars. The character work is pretty 
obvious, but pretty obvious is what a film where motorcycles are inevitably 
carrying machine guns needs.
Also wonderful is the film’s complete lack of warehouse sets. Shot in 
Thailand (with a mostly Thai crew in the technical on-set roles), Reiné has 
rather a lot of very picturesque jungle, a few ruins, waterways and bridges to 
work with, which does of course help enable the variety of action scenes I’ve 
already praised and provides the film with a sense of place and space always 
useful in action cinema. It’s what turns Hard Target 2 into a much 
better film than you’ll probably hope for going in.
Sunday, July 5, 2020
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