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Although this success was moderate compared to similar movies of the time, such as the Rocky series, The Karate Kid series, or even The Last Dragon, it remains a cult classic film to many people around the world. 1987's No Retreat, No Surrender 2 was originally intended to be a direct sequel to this film, but safety concerns over filming in ...
No Retreat, No Surrender was released on May 2, 1986. [8] It was the eleventh-highest grossing film on its opening week at the American box office, earning $739,723; [9] it grossed a total of $4,662,137 in the United States and Canada. [10] The film sold 1.3 million tickets in the United States [11] and 395,013 in France. [12]
No Retreat, No Surrender 3: Blood Brothers This page was last edited on 20 December 2020, at 23:01 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Retreat is a 2011 British horror-thriller film and the directorial debut of former film editor Carl Tibbets. The film stars Cillian Murphy, Jamie Bell, and Thandiwe Newton as three people isolated from the rest of the world on a remote island. Two of them are told they are survivors of a fatal airborne disease that is sweeping over the entire ...
No Retreat, No Surrender 2 (also known as Karate Tiger 2: Raging Thunder) is a 1987 Hong Kong-American martial arts film directed by Corey Yuen, and starring Loren Avedon, Matthias Hues, Max Thayer and Cynthia Rothrock.
No Surrender, a 2002 short film by Richard James Allen; No Surrender, a 1985 comedy starring Michael Angelis; Impact Wrestling No Surrender, a professional wrestling pay-per-view event "No Surrender, No Retreat" (Babylon 5), a 1997 episode of Babylon 5
No Retreat, No Surrender 3: Blood Brothers is a 1990 American action film directed by Lucas Lowe and starring Loren Avedon and Keith Vitali. While financed by Seasonal Entertainment, it does not have any narrative or character connection to No Retreat, No Surrender or the sequel , both directed by Corey Yuen .
According to an interview with actor Loren Avedon, [1] he shot his scenes independently with his scenes involving Richard Jaeckel as his boss. In addition, in the scene where Avedon's character does the Stallone-like scream after seeing Khan and remembering the death of his brother, Avedon told director Lo he wanted to just toss the film tape into the fire in anger.