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Recounting the incident in his autobiography, Zito claims that he suffered a broken hand as a result of striking Van Damme numerous times after Van Damme had told a bouncer at the club that Zito had "no heart" and the bouncer relayed Van Damme's comments to Zito. [71] He reportedly stood over a prone Van Damme shouting: "This ain't the movies!
Zito, who had previously bodyguarded Van Damme and did stunts on the film Nowhere to Run, recalled the incident in his 2002 autobiography Street Justice, claiming that he suffered a broken hand as a result of striking Van Damme several times after Van Damme made disparaging remarks about him to a club bouncer, who then relayed the comments to ...
4 Chuck Zito fight. 5 Flemish or Wallonian. 6 comments. 6 Possible Jean Claude Van Damme movie. 1 comment. 7 Aphorisms. 4 comments. 8 Jean Claude's image. 2 comments ...
Released in theaters 35 years ago, on Feb. 26, 1988, Bloodsport starred Van Damme as Frank Dux, a U.S. Army soldier who leaves the military to enter a fight-to-the-death martial arts tournament in ...
The former president’s courthouse entourage also included Chuck Zito, who, as The New Republic noted, also spent several years in prison for drug conspiracy charges.
Fight 3: Jean-Claude Van Damme, thinking guest referee Chuck Norris is his opponent, kicks him cleanly in half through his waist and proclaims himself the winner. He is later reprimanded by Mills Lane who furiously reveals that he's supposed to be fighting Jackie Chan and not Norris.
Austin Trunick of Under the Radar said Van Damme's scenes "are prime Van Damme, at least, with some fantastic fight choreography and a full showcase of splits, high-kicks, and bug-eyed snarling". [22] The film was riffed live at a number of venues on the Mystery Science Theater 3000 Live: The Great Cheesy Movie Tour, by Joel Hodgson, in 2019.
To hype Bloodfist 's release, Concorde printed a disparaging quote from World Kickboxing Association president Howard Hanson—whose light heavyweight title was held by Wilson—on the film's poster, reading "Don Wilson would kick Van Damme's a-- in one round!" Corman also challenged the Belgian to a fight with Wilson for $100,000.