5/18/2023 0 Comments Timecop blu ray![]() While Bloodsport is minimal by most standards, this second, later film is all about the spectacle. Max's boss and trusted friend, Eugene Matuzak (Bruce McGill) urges him not to go too far but when Max is able to connect the case to his wife's murder, all bets are off and he is soon hell bent on bringing McComb to justice even if it does look like the senator is going to become the next President of the United States. Soon, what Max believes to be a routine investigation puts him on the trail of a United States senator named McComb (Ron Silver) who appears to have ties to some time travelling criminals. With this on his mind constantly, he throws himself into his job and becomes the best at what he does, even going so far as to turn in his own partner. One night, after work, Max's beautiful wife, Melissa (Mia Sara), is murdered after taking the brunt of an attack that was meant to kill him in her place. Their job is to stop criminal types from exploiting the technology that allows them to go back in time and alter things for profit. Set in the not too distant future, the film follows the exploits of Max Walker (Van Damme) who works for the Time Enforcement Commission. While in Bloodsport Van Damme may have had something to prove, here his star power is firmly established and the storyline plays up to that. Yes, it definitely borrows from tournament based kung fu films made years before and it isn't particularly original or well acted or even really very logical, but it delivers a lot of great fighting and enough action that it's good, and completely brainless, entertainment.īased on the Dark Horse comic book of the same name, Time Cop was directed in 1994 by Peter Hyams and produced by none other than Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert of The Evil Dead fame. When you keep in mind that this movie was made well before UFC and other mixed martial arts leagues were televised, it's easy to see how Bloodsport would capture an action loving audience. ![]() Bolo Yeung makes for a fine opponent, using his bulk and his size and his intimidating glare to really ham it up and convince you that he does want to kill Dux, while the rest of the supporting cast are all fine if fairly forgettable (including Whitaker, who doesn't really have a whole lot to do here at all). Van Damme's acting here is quite wooden, as it is in many of his films made before the millennium (say what you will but sometime after the year 2000 he turned into a very respectable actor), but he's got a charisma and a screen presence and a confidence that makes it easy to get behind him and want him to win the day. The story exists really only to string together the fight scenes that make up the vast majority of the movie but even if there are plot holes big enough to fly a 747 through the movie is pretty entertaining. Short on plot but high on ass kicking action, Bloodsportisn't deep or even particularly original but it is a lot of fun. Army guys (Norman Burton and Forest Whitaker) who have shown up looking for him. Dux, on the other hand, is prepping for the inevitable showdown with Chong Li while trying to avoid the U.S. He didn't count on Dux's elite martial arts training, however, and it soon becomes obvious that Chong Li will do whatever it takes to bring Dux down before he becomes a threat to his title. Despite insistence from his superior officers, soldier Dux takes a flight overseas to compete and soon strikes the fancy of a sexy lady reporter (Leah Ayres) who hops into bed with him at the drop of a hat.Īs the competition begins, last year's favorite, a psychopath named Chong Li (Bolo Yeung), appears to be the favorite to win once again when he easily takes down everyone he gets in the ring with. ![]() Van Damme's leading man debut was 1987's Bloodsport, a fine Cannon Films production that saw the man play a military man named Frank Dux who gets invited to a prestigious underground fighting competition held in Hong Kong known as the Kumite. Both discs are housed on the same fifty gig Blu-ray disc. Bloodsport was the one that made him a marquee name and launched his glory days, while Time Cop is a fun entry from the era in which his star power was just starting to wane a little bit. Warner's no-frills line of double feature catalogue titles reaches into the company's vaults and offers up a double dose of quality Van Dammage for fans of the muscles from Brussels.
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