Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 3: Blood Brothers This page was last edited on 20 December 2020, at 23:01 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
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]
Ritual of Evil is a 1970 American made-for-television drama horror film directed by Robert Day and starring Louis Jourdan. It was made as a sequel to Fear No Evil (1969), which also starred Louis Jourdan as Dr. Sorrell. [1]
Kidnapped, also known as The Adventures of David Balfour, was a 1978 TV miniseries, based on Robert Louis Stevenson's novel Kidnapped, with some elements taken from his novel Catriona. It was a French - West German co-production. [1] Peter Graham Scott was the producer and scriptwriter. [2] The cast included: David McCallum as Alan Breck
In addition to many appearances in martial arts films like No Retreat, No Surrender 2: Raging Thunder, No Retreat, No Surrender 3: Blood Brothers and The King of the Kickboxers and he also worked in television series such as Baywatch and Thunder in Paradise. For the films Deadly Ransom (1998) and The Silent Force (2001), Avedon worked both as ...
Alan Breck Stewart (Armand Assante) returns to his home village, which is already menaced by the highland clearances.His foster father James Stewart of the Glen (Brian McGrath) issues the taxpayers' money for the exiled House of Stuart to him and beseeches him to meet King George's factor, the "Red Fox" Colin Roy Campbell of Glenure (Brendan Gleeson).
The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel written by Robert Lewis Taylor, published in 1958. [1] It was later made into a short-running television series on ABC from September 1963 through March 1964, featuring Kurt Russell as Jaimie, Dan O'Herlihy as his father, "Doc" Sardius McPheeters, and Michael Witney and Charles Bronson as the wagon masters, Buck Coulter and ...