Triple Threat: An Ultimate Martial Arts Movie for the Ages

Tony Jaa, Scott Adkins, Tiger Chen, Michael Jai White, Iko Uwais all rolled into one ultimate action brawl.

Since I was a child, I have loved martial arts movies. From Van Damme to Bruce Lee, watching guys pummeling each other to death with punches and kicks has brought me hours and hours of sheer excitement and joy. So as I’ve gotten older, and as the genre continues on, I’ve championed the ever evolving new breed of martial arts action performers.

Stars like Tony Jaa, Scott Adkins, Michael Jai White, Iko Uwais and so on have continued to carry on the tradition of being the best, most elegantly badass martial artists on screen like their peers before them.

So when it was announced that action filmmaker Jesse V. Johnson would be bringing the brightest stars of the martial arts together for Triple Threat, and Michael Bisping, at the moment into one movie together, my heart did a somersault. I was convinced from that day on that we would be getting the newest contender for best action movie ever made. So… Was I right?? Let’s find out…

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Triple Threat Goes Hard

Synopsis: A hit contract is taken out on a billionaire’s daughter (Celina Jade) intent on bringing down a major crime syndicate. A down and out team of mercenaries (Tony Jaa, Iko Uwais, Tiger Chen) must take on a group of professional assassins (Scott Adkins, Michael Jai White, Michael Bisping, Jeeja Yanin) and stop them before they kill their target.

Boy… was this one a doozy! It was absolutely everything I could’ve hoped for! A 90 minute cavalcade of flawless buttkicking, with each cast member getting to put their tremendous talent on display for our pleasure.

I was amazed from beginning to end! Now folks, this is what The Expendables should’ve been. Instead of having the best action heroes team up, just have them beat the crap out of each other! Simple as that.

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An Ultimate Action Movie Starting Lineup

Now, let me get into the cast for a second. This is a dream cast of Ultimate Action Movie proportions! Tony Jaa  (Ong Bak), Iko Uwais (The Raid), Tiger Chen (Man of Tai Chi), Scott Adkins (Undisputed 4), Michael Jai White (Blood & Bone) Jeeja Yanin (Chocolate), and Former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping. Just amazing, right??

The very best the martial arts/action genre has to offer. And they shine tremendously in this! Face cracking, bone breaking, skull crushing shine to be exact. But that’s not to say that’s all they have to offer, though. Each actor also gets a chance to show off their acting prowess and they more than do a terrific job! Each hero gets a great dramatic moment, while each villain gets a awesome moment to show off their despicable vileness. Just a great job all around!

Speaking of great job, all the kudos in the world to director Johnson for running the tightest of ships on this one! Fast paced and to the point, Johnson wastes no time getting right into the thick of things. And his handling of the sequences is amazing to say the least. Precision editing. Beautifully framed shots with a great depth of feel for the choreography, Johnson proves once again why he is one of the best action directors working today. Hopefully, big studios will finally give him the big studio project he deserves (preferably starring Adkins, of course).

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But How Ultimate is the Action??

And now, we get to the main attraction: the action. And guys… you are in for a show! Action galore! From start to finish! Opens with a massive jungle shootout that invokes glorious memories of Predator, and ends with a face off that’s worth the price of admission (more on that in a sec)! I’m telling you, this is a true feast for action fans everywhere! Shootouts, car chases, and non stop fights. You get your money’s worth, and then some! And with each cast member on their A-game, the action scenes are just astounding.

But none more astounding than the mano y mano showdown between Tony Jaa & Scott Adkins. Seriously guys, this is the one I’ve been waiting for. Ever since Ong Bak and Undisputed 2, I’ve been waiting for these 2 to finally come together in a movie for an epic clash of the martial arts titans. And now that it has finally happened, it more than lived up to my expectations! Jaa vs Adkins is a head to head that’s bound to become an instant classic.

Right up there with Lee vs Norris, Chan vs Urquidez, and Van Damme vs Yeung. Tim Man also deserves all the credit in the world for his forever awesome choreography. It was so beautiful, I nearly cried! Bravo!

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Our UAMC Thoughts

Any nitpicks? I would’ve liked a bit more time with the heroes. The movie moves so fast that we don’t get much time with them out of action mode. Each character has a moment to let us know who they are, and that’s great, but I could’ve used a couple of more mins to explore their backstories. Especially Uwais’s character.

But all in all, I was more than completely satisfied with this one! I am in love. Other action films of 2019 have their work cut out for them, because this is the one to beat. And to the amazing cast and crew: Thank you for giving me and action fans everywhere the movie they needed, and deserved.


What are your thoughts on this ultimate action martial arts lineup? Let us know in the comments!

Red Sonja Reboot Reportedly Drops Director Bryan Singer

The embattled director is no longer helming the sword-and-sorcery actioner.

While news of Arnold Schwarzenegger pushing for a third Conan the Barbarian movie heats up (reportedly a King Conan final role for Arnold is in the works), the sword-and-sorcery female led spin-off Red Sonja reboot has dropped director Bryan Singer amidst his sexual assault allegations.

For ultimate action movie fans, the original Red Sonja actioner was released in 1985 and famously starred Brigitte Nielsen as the titular character with Arnold in a supporting role as Lord Kalidor.

The reboot has long been in the works with it set to begin production possibly here in 2019, but with the latest news it appears that the project might be shelved indefinitely until Avi Lerner CEO of Millennium Films finds a suitable replacement to helm the project.

“Lerner made news recently when he hired Bryan Singer to direct a reboot of Red Sonja. After Singer was accused in an Atlantic magazine article of sexually assaulting underaged boys, Lerner dismissed the story as “agenda-driven fake news,” then walked the statement back. Eventually, he dropped Singer from the project because he was unable to secure a domestic distributor.”

Until then, we’ll always have Arnold and Brigitte’s ultimate sword fight legacy.



What are your thoughts on this suspended Red Sonja reboot? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Jean-Claude Van Damme ‘Wept’ When he Saw the First Cut of Bloodsport

But who didn’t cry their eyes out when they saw Bloodsport in all its ultimate glory?

It’s the film that put Jean-Claude Van Damme on the map and one beloved by ultimate action movie fans the world over, but Bloodsport was nearly a complete disaster.

Speaking during a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Van Damme revealed how the original cut of the Cannon Films’ classic brought him to tears – but not in a good way.

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The First Bloodsport Cut

Back in 1988 the Muscles from Brussels was busy filming Kickboxer, over in Bangkok when he got a call from screenwriter Sheldon Lettich.

Lettich had worked with Van Damme on Bloodsport and, after viewing the initial cut of the Cannon Films classic was calling the Belgian with bad news.

“‘Your movie looks like shit,'” Van Damme recalls Lettich saying. “I came back from Thailand, and we saw the cut and I wept.”

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The Most Ultimate Tears Ever

Suddenly Van Damme’s dream of making it big in Hollywood was in peril – had Bloodsport been released in its original form, it could well have disappeared into 1980s VHS mediocrity.

But, as Van Damme recalled to THR, he wasn’t about to let that happen without a fight.

He sought out producer Menahem Golan, the man who had given him his big break with Bloodsport and begged him to let the film be re-cut.

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The Bloodsport We Know and Love

After some grovelling, Golan relented, with Van Damme, Lettich and Carl Kress, the editor of The Towering Inferno, working together to put an improved cut of the movie together.

Golan had been planning to release the film directly to video after seeing the initial cut but was persuaded otherwise.

Instead, Bloodsport was put on one screen in New York.

The positive response to that screening was enough to convince Golan to grant Bloodsport a proper release and the rest, as they say, is history.


How hard did you cry when you first saw Van Damme in Bloodsport? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Why ‘Waterworld’ Failed and How to Make it Ultimate

Re-examining Kevin Costner’s ‘Waterworld’ (1995) and how it could have been made ultimate!

Believe it or not Kevin Costner was once thought as an action movie star. Not for long. He had a few films categorized as action; The Postman and Dances with Wolves (which was more of a drama) for example. But the film that really made people think of him as an action star (however briefly) was Waterworld. And yet, Waterworld flopped terribly. It cost $172 million to make and only grossed $88 million domestic. Those are 1995 numbers so the losses after inflation are even greater than that $90 million.

Although Waterworld would eventually recoup its losses internationally, it was still considered a flop. Why? I’ll answer that here.

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The Asexual Hero

There are two scenes in Waterworld where the Mariner (Costner’s character) turns down sex. In the first scene some floating villagers ask him to impregnate a young lady to avoid in-breeding. He refuses, which understandably raises the villagers’ suspicions. The second scene in which the Mariner refuses sex is when Helen (Jeanne Tripplehorn) offers him sex in exchange for some real-estate on his boat. Again, the Mariner refuses, for no discernible reason.

How to fix it:

That’s easy. At some point in the film the Mariner has get laid. If, for reasons concerning the plot or character development, the Mariner doesn’t engage in the act during the scenes described above he must engage in the act by the end of the film. In Waterworld, the Mariner takes Helen to the only land left on Earth but leaves without getting any. The result of all these failures is that the Mariner comes across as an asexual anti-hero. It’s not something your average man can relate to nor is it something a man would aspire to become.

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A Forgettable Leading Lady

Jeanne Tripplehorn was attractive, but not stunning in any way. Quick, name another Jeanne Tripplehorn movie. It’s not possible. Tripplehorn in this film has two roles to play; the mother figure to the innocent child and the damsel in distress that the hero must save. There are far more desirable women of the 90s to fulfill this role than Tripplehorn.

How to fix it:

A better woman for this role would be Dana Delaney.

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The PG-13 Rating

Many action movies have the PG-13 rating and are still great (I.e. Goldeneye). Waterworld was not one of them. The villain wasn’t brutal in any way, and therefore we had no reason to fear for the hero or the damsel or the innocent child. What the rating did to this movie was prevent scenes from having any intense emotions. The action scenes were good but there was no suspense behind them.

How to fix it:

Make it rated R. Show some blood. Show some guts. Show some (just a little) brutality from the villain. Show some gratuitous nudity (preferably from Dana Delaney) that successfully entice the hero to indulge.

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Kevin Costner Doesn’t Look Like an Action Hero

1995 was not a transformative year in action movies. When we thought of action heroes then we thought of Arnold and Sly and Bruce Willis. Kevin Costner is a far cry from them. Today we can consider Tom Cruise an action star even though he isn’t bulky or shredded, but Costner does not fit with the Cruises.

How to fix it:

Costner could have put in some sweat and effort and built some muscle or at least gotten shredded like an Olympic swimmer (which would have fit with the plot). Barring that, another actor may have done a better job with a similar look (for 1995 I’m thinking Kevin Sorbo).

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The Hero Has No Purpose

What exactly is the Mariner doing in Waterworld? We see that he is buying anything worth buying with dirt (the Waterworld currency). Other than that, he has no purpose. Once he allows a woman he won’t bang and an innocent child on his ship that changes. Even though he has no emotional connection to them he rescues them once they’ve been taken by the villain. At the end of the film, once he has taken the damsel and the child to dry land he leaves. What he leaves to do we don’t know.

How to fix it:

A noble purpose would have really aided the film. If the villain had played a part in his being mutated (which gave the Mariner gills) or killed the Mariner’s family Waterworld could have had a revenge story. Once the damsel and child are taken the Mariner could then say, “I won’t let [the villain] to do them what he did to me or my family.” 

Or the Mariner could be on a quest to find dry land just like the villain. The movie could be a race to see who finds dry land first, adding a much-needed element of suspense. Any noble motivation would be better than no motivation for the hero of the film.

The good news about Waterworld is that they didn’t make a sequel.


Article by Jared Trueheart. For more about Jared on masculine story-telling visit www.legendsofmen.com

What are your thoughts on Kevin Costner’s Waterworld? What would you change to make it more ultimate? Let us know your thoughts in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Arnold Schwarzenegger Still Wants to Make a ‘King Conan’ Movie

No Merchandising. Editorial Use Only. No Book Cover Usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by De Laurentiis/REX/Shutterstock (5884212h) Arnold Schwarzenegger Conan The Barbarian - 1982 Director: John Milius De Laurentiis USA On/Off Set Fantasy Conan le barbare

Arnold back as “King Conan”? Yes ultimately please!

Arnold Schwarzenegger is an action movie star of many franchises; Terminator, Predator and The Expendables to name but a few. But one franchise that’s been sorely overlooked in recent times is Conan the Barbarian.

John Milius’ inspired 1982 effort based on the comic book character created by Robert E. Howard helped put Arnie on the map in Hollywood.

But it’s been some 35 years since Schwarzenegger turned out as Conan in 1984’s Conan Destroyer. Since then he’s been pining to do a third and final Conan movie.

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A Third and Final Conan

Unfortunately, the powers that be have yet to be persuaded that a third film, tentatively titled King Conan and focusing on the Barbarian Warrior in his later years, would be worth their time.

Instead there’s been a disappointing update starring Jason Momoa and some now-scrapped plans for a Conan The Barbarian TV series on Amazon.

Schwarzenegger hasn’t given up the ghost quite yet though and during an interview with The Arnold Fans explained what stands between him and another Conan outing.

Arnold Schwarzenegger Conan Proclamation

“When there’s an estate like this, the Robert E. Howard estate,” Schwarzenegger said.

“When someone buys these rights, those people now own the rights and they have their own vision of what they want to do and the guy that has the rights is some young guy and he’s trying to figure out how to get his way through Hollywood and this is not easy to do.”

“I hope it will be done very soon because I think it’s a great idea,” he said.

“We have been trying to convince [the Conan rights owners] for years now that the way to go is to come back and hire a really great director and to do another Conan movie and have me play King Conan, when Conan is like 70 years old and he’s disgusted by sitting on the throne and being the king and then something happens after that.

“It’s really not that far from creating a finished script.”

There’s life in Conan the Barbarian yet.


Are you excited for a possible King Conan third feature? Let us know in the comments or on the Facebook page!

Japanese Trailer for New Steven Seagal Actioner ‘General Commander’ Drops!

Steven Seagal keeps the hits coming with new Japanese actioner ‘General Commander’ (2018).

Our ultimate action movie tough guy aka Akido action master Steven Seagal is at it again messing around with some bad dudes in this latest trailer for General Commander. Seagal – who has been an action movie enigma in these years past his 80s/90s skinny jeans heyday – has been in the news quite a bit lately catching beef with MMA Dillon Danis and spatting words with On Deadly Ground co-star Michael Caine of all people. (I mean, what?)

He’s also been busy palling around with Putin in Russia where he’s not only running for governor of a small Russian province but is also apparently opening his own winery out there as well. (Also, what??)

Yet, we still love the big oaf for his legendary ultimate action movie classics (like everyone’s favorite ultimate action chef in Under Siege). And it looks like Seagal is back at again with a very ultimate looking new actioner here.

Steven Seagal in General Commander

What we know about General Commander is this. Seagal plays Jake Alexander – a CIA Global Response Staff (GRS) contractor in Southeast Asia – who is sent on assignment to Macau to apprehend an international banker money launderer. Seagal teams up with some local law enforcement before doing his usual tough guy routine-ness and butts heads with some arms dealers and detonates the situation.

Anyway, check it out for yourself below. And let us know what you think!



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UAMC Revisits ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: The Secret of the Ooze’ (1991)

But how does the water downed TMNT 2 live up against its ultimate live-action original?

Shortly after saving NYC from the Shredder’s underground tyranny, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (voiced by Brian Toshi, Robbie Rist, Adam Carl, and Laurie Faso) and their sensei Splinter (voiced by Kevin Clash) turn to their origins in their next adventure. The ooze that mutated them fifteen years ago has gotten out from the Techno Global Research Industries building, coming to the attention of the Foot Clan.

The Shredder (Francois Chau) has gotten his hands on a cannister of the mutagen and Dr. Jordan Perry (David Warner), a scientist affiliated with TGRI. Shredder creates new mutant creatures to oppose the turtles, Tokka and Rahzar (both voiced by voice actor extraordinaire Frank Welker).

With only their newscaster friend April O’Neil (Paige Turco) and pizza delivery boy/martial arts enthusiast Keno (Ernie Reyes, Jr., who also played Donatello’s stunt double in the first movie) to help them, can the Turtles avert another crisis?

Picking up Where TMNT Left Off

While the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie proved to be an action classic and smash hit, it garnered a lot of criticism from parents and moral watchdogs for being “too violent.” The studio took this complaint seriously, deciding the inevitable sequel would be more kid-friendly. They’d shut the parents up and make a box office killing. (Read our UAMC review of the original below…)

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And boy, did they achieve this end, toning down not only the action but the dramatic stakes as well. Secret of the Ooze has more the feel of the 1980s TMNT cartoon show than the gritty yet still light-hearted tone of the original movie.

The plot is quite slight, to put it mildly, feeling more like a full-length episode of the 1980s TV series than a feature film. Performances from the human actors are way more exaggerated on the whole. The sets are even more cartoony.

Ultimate Action Watered Down

The Shredder is much less of a threat. In the first film, he was formidable and brutal, certainly no fool either. Here, the garbage crusher must have squeezed his head a bit too much, because he does some downright dumb things, like allowing the turtles to give drugged donuts to the simple-minded Tokka and Rahzar as part of a pre-battle “ritual.” He does half of the Turtles’ work for them, that’s how incompetent he is!

The weird thing is that there are moments where the film tries— and this is the best way I can put it—to get existential. Donatello frets about the reason the turtles were created and is saddened that mere chance is the reason they ever came into contact with the ooze. The turtles also mourn that they can never walk freely in the human world due to their mutant status. But none of this ever goes beyond pseudo-philosophical lip service, so I’m not so sure why the filmmakers bothered.

Where are the Turtles in Peril?

It doesn’t help that the story isn’t very compelling. The first movie had a simple story, true, but it had heart and a sense of real danger. The Shredder’s plan might not have been to take over the world, but he was a danger to the teenage misfits he enlisted, the public he victimized, and the turtles themselves. There was true investment amidst the awesome ninja action and wacky one-liners, which only increased the suspense when things got dangerous.

Here, there’s little urgency to stop the Shredder. Tokka and Rahzar are destructive, but they’re too dumb to be considered a big deal. Even the New Yorkers who see him tearing up the streets just shrug them off. I always believe that half of what makes an ultimate action movie work are true stakes and consequences, which we get so little of in Secret of the Ooze.

Turtles Slapsticking it Up

Nobody really gets into actual fights in this movie, at least not often and even then, there seems to be a big effort to make sure nothing is ever too violent. It’s more like the bad guys throw punches and the turtles dodge them, or they knock the bad guys over. They are more likely to use yo-yos and sausage links as weapons than nunchucks, swords, or sai (apparently, Donatello’s bo staff was less of an issue).

The main mode of attack seems to be slapstick antics. The first fight scene in the mall is a good taste of what the action is like: silly, exaggerated, and overall harmless, everything the parents wanted when they took their eight-year-olds to see a movie about giant, wisecracking turtles the first time around. Don’t expect Raphael to get knocked into a coma in this one, folks!

At Least they Look Turtle-y

I’ve heard from a lot of 80s and 90s kids that they enjoyed the first Turtles movie because the action was both spectacular and packed with consequence. The turtles were more heroic because they were able to face actual danger from competent, threatening villains.

But I can’t get too down on the movie: at least, it’s fun and the action scenes, if tamer, are still impressive feats of acrobatics from those guys in turtle costumes. They’re able to casually flip and jump as though they were not limited in any way. And the suits still look great (not the case by the time we get to the cinematic nightmare that is Turtles in Time).

Ninja Wrapping Things Up

And I will say, the rampant cheesiness is charming more often than not, the most memorable cornball moment being the part where the Turtles and their mutant enemies crash a Vanilla Ice concert. Inspired by this quartet of green muses, Ice breaks into an impromptu “Ninja Rap” while the crowd cheers. I don’t think any one scene in the movie nails its tone down more than that.

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I’d say this movie is to the original TMNT trilogy what Robocop 2 was to the Robocop series: watered down certainly, but when the ultimate action breaks through, it’s good stuff. And just like the Robocop series, the “badness” doesn’t really kick in until the third installment.


What are your memories and thoughts on TMNT 2? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Watch Marvel’s ‘The Avengers’ as a ’90s Ultimate Action Movie!

The Avengers gets the fan-made retro trailer makeover to up its ultimateness 1990%!

We’ve gone through the debates on this before. One true Ultimate Action Movies need to be from the UAMC golden era predominantly focused on the 1980s and 90s. We’ve also debated if Marvel superhero movies like The Avengers: Endgame are even ultimate action movie worthy at all? (The consensus seems to be… not really.)

But what if we put it to you that there existed – in a parallel universe perhaps – a truly retro 1990s Avengers VHS-version? How would we react then? I mean, there were some UAMC-worthy superhero attempts in the 80s and 90s like Tim Burton’s Batman (which we compared against its ultimate knock-off here), Dolph Lundgren’s The Punisher and Masters of the Universe (as well as a long rumored Dolph Venom movie), and Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Conan films (which he’s since teased rebooting).

Not to mention quasi-superheros like Robocop (read all of our reviews and rankings here), the Highlander series (don’t read our review of Highlander II – it’s awful) and even kids actioners like the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (that review, however, is great).

And who’s to say that pretty much every role Sylvester Stallone, Chuck Norris, Jean-Claude Van Damme, or Steven Seagal ever played couldn’t be considered to have at least some superhero martial arts, superhuman strength, or piercy eyed badass-ness powers!

It’s almost a shame this fan-made trailer below isn’t a reality, because if The Avengers did come out in the 90s, many of our favorite UAMC stars would have to had roles. Which becomes a pretty fun game of figuring out who would truly be Captain America and who would be the Hulk (JK – it’d be Stallone and Arnold respectively).

So, enjoy the manufactured nostalgia for a modern genre runamuck against its ultimate action movie legacy with this trailer below.



Which ultimate action movie stars would you cast in a ’90s version of The Avengers? Let us know your thoughts in the comments or on our Facebook page!

Jean-Claude Van Damme Finally Reveals Why He Left ‘Predator’

The mystery of Van Damme’s reasons have finally be solved… Kinda.

Though it seems hard to fathom now, there was a time when John McTiernan’s 80s action sci-fi classic was set to pit Arnold Schwarzenegger and a young Jean-Claude Van Damme.

The Muscles from Brussels was originally casted at the titular alien only to suddenly depart the production with Kevin Peter Hall brought in in his place.

So, what exactly happened on the set of Predator? There are plenty of contrasting accounts, all of which have been summarised in Ultimate Action Movie Club’s feature on Van Damme’s short-lived stint as the Predator. (Which you can read below.)

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A Van Damme Mystery

Some suggested Van Damme was unhappy at the fact his face would be concealed for much of the filming, meaning little in the way of exposure for the up-and-coming action star.

Others indicated the decision was taken after the Predator costume underwent major revisions with director John McTiernan and producer Joel Silver deciding a larger actor was required for the role of the fearsome alien.

Now, speaking in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Van Damme revealed his side of the story, which appears to suggest both of the above may have been true.

Not His Best Suit

The problems began when he first tried on the original Predator suit and struggled to breathe.

“I like to breathe — and they’re gonna do my head and everything,” Van Damme said.

“They put in my mouth like a tube [to breathe through]. I was covered in that cast for at least 20 minutes. It was boiling hot. My friend told me, ‘If you cannot breathe, just [wiggle] your finger and I’ll pull that stuff away from you.’ And I did it. I started to panic. And they go, ‘No! Five more minutes!'”

Despite getting through the initial casting process, which required him to wear the suit, Van Damme hated

“My head was in the neck. My hands were in the forearms, and there were cables [attached to my fingers to move the creature’s head and jaws]. My feet were in his calves, so I was on [stilts]. It was a disgusting outfit,” he says.

The fact Van Damme was unable to deliver any of his signature high kicks was also an issue, given that was what had got him hired in the first place.

Deeming the suit unsafe and lacking the agility needed to effectively pull off the character effectively, Van Damme even recalls having to operate in the suit on stilts and that, because it was rubber, he ended up sweating profusely when wearing it.

Conflicting Reports

According to JCVD, things came to a head when Silver asked him to complete one stunt.

“When Joel asked me to jump, I knew it was gonna be a bad one. I said, ‘This is impossible, Joel. I think we’re gonna have a problem.,'” he said.

“The guy who did my stunt, something bad happened to him. Crack [makes snapping motion]. And then they stopped the film, and they did a new, more safe, outfit.”

At this point, Hall came in in place of Van Damme though there are holes in the Belgian’s account – namely that no one else can recall a stuntman getting injured on set.

Beau Marks, first assistant director on the film, even told THR: “Nobody broke their fucking leg.”

“When I was trying to explain what had happened [with the studio] and why we were not going to need him, he kept saying ‘But I am the Predator!’ I said, ‘Well, let’s go talk to Joel.’ Joel has a philosophy: Beg to begin with, and then you kill the person,” Marks added.

“Well, he got through begging real quickly. He started off as nice as anybody could possibly start off, and then he just ended where he told Claude that he wanted to take his fucking head, go out there, put it on the concrete and have one of those big fucking trucks run over his head 50-fucking-thousand times. That’s how it ended.” Cool.

This one looks set to rumble on. For the full story, check out our feature on Van Damme’s ill-fated spell as the Predator.


Who do you believe in this ultimate action movie debate? Let us know in the comments or on our Facebook page!

UAMC Interview: Jean-Paul Ly on the Making of ‘Nightshooters’

Jean-Paul Ly is going places in the world of action movies.

A stuntman and budding martial arts master, Jean-Paul Ly steals the show in his latest movie, Nightshooters, which serves as a brilliantly balls-to-the-wall fusion of Die Hard and The Raid by way of Shaun of the Dead. Read our full UAMC review below…

Shoot the Night with Jean-Paul Ly in the Action Packed NIGHTSHOOTERS

It focuses on a group of budding filmmakers who accidentally witness a gangland murder during a night shoot at a soon-to-be-demolished high rise. A bloody and often amusing game of cat and mouse unfolds and the results do not disappoint.

A noticeable British affair, writer/director Marc Price’s film may be packed full of that familiar English wit but it’s Ly who leads the way in the action stakes, taking centre stage in a series of well-choreographed action set pieces.

To mark the film’s home release, Ultimate Action Movie Club spoke to Ly about Nightshooters, action movies and who would win in a fight between Jean-Claude Van Damme and Steven Seagal.

Who were your ultimate action movie heroes growing up?

Like a lot of people, i grew up watching Bruce Lee movies, and then later on the Jackie Chan and Jet Li’ ones. They were massive inspirations, not only for martial arts but as “ambassadors” in films for asian representation.

How did you get involved in Nightshooters?

We were discussing with Marc Price about a project he had in mind for several months (it wasn’t Nightshooters at that time).

I’ve always wanted to act in a British comedy, and we thought that mixing the action and comedy would be a good idea. He was nice enough to trust me as an actor and in the action design, so we kept on working until getting the opportunity to make another, more affordable film in his line up, Nightshooters.

What’s your ultimate action movie, one that you can watch again and again?

Jackie Chan “Armour of God 2” (Operation Condor in french)!

This film had everything: the adventure, the comedy, traveling, and the great action.

How did you get started in the action movie business?

I’ve started 5 years ago, which does surprise a lot of people! Long story short: I was a marketing manager for a pharmaceutical company in asia, but i couldn’t stop thinking about martial arts, every single day. So i’ve decided to quit that job and then went back to my hometown (Paris), announced to my parents my will to work in the film business and flew to London 2 days later.

Why should action movie fans seek out Nightshooters?

I think it will appeal for people who like:
– The British humor : it’s quite dark at some point
– Very likeable characters : the cast in this film is amazing, and i was blessed to be working alongside such talented actors. They are the force of the movie.
– The martial arts : by showcasing different styles

My biggest fear was to make the usual B movie, where the focus is only on the action, but i believe that Nightshootershad a strong direction and is more a comedy, before being an action film.

If you could go back and star in any action movie, which would it be?

None! They are perfect as they are 🙂

Who has been your biggest influence as an action movie star?

I would say Donnie Yen today. I like the grounded approach, very stylised kicks, but mainly because he’s one of the few who’s adaptive to many styles and forms, if not the only one.

What was the biggest challenge of working on a movie like this?

As you can tell, it’s a very low budget film! Which means that i didn’t have enough time to rehearse, or polish it all nicely. The action department had around 2 weeks of prep and creation. I choreographed it all myself, and with the support of a great stunt team (Donovan Louie, Axel Nu, Eddie Lee, Tom Cotton, Jon Alagoa and Danny Darwin), we’ve designed/rehearsed it all together. The movie wouldn’t be made without them.

But, like my previous film Jailbreak, i’ve faced that same situation of doing both the acting and the action design. Being a fight choreographer is a full time job in itself, and i’m still learning on processing both. In a bigger budget or with a bigger team, that would be much easier, but i’ve never had that chance yet!

Settle an ultimate action movie debate for us: Stallone or Schwarzenegger?

Arnold all the way! He is THE ultimate action star that has ever lived.

If you could team up with any action star for your own buddy cop movie, who would it be and why?

I would say The Rock but let’s not dream too much!

We noticed you are working as a stunt performer on Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw – can you tell us anything about the movie? Is it going to be as crazy as the trailer looks?

I’ve been working on for a few days during the London shoot, thanks to the awesome Fight Coordinator Greg Rementer and his team. The shooting was intense but also very relaxed, because it was so well directed.

It was amazing to be working with Jason Statham and The Rock on set, we laughed a lot seeing them act and so at ease with their characters.

I am certain that it will be one of the best action blockbuster of this year.

What’s the best thing about working in the action movie business?

Simply to be fortunate enough to do martial arts for the screen!

Finally, who would win in a fight between Jean-Claude Van Damme and Steven Seagal?

Draw!


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